Oil prices surge after Saudi air strikes in Yemen
Oil prices surge after Saudi air strikes in Yemen
(Reuters) - Brent crude oil prices shot up nearly 6 percent on Thursday after Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Arab allies began a military operation in Yemen, although Asian importers said they were not immediately worried about supply disruptions.
The strike against
Iran-backed Houthi rebels who have driven the president from the
country's capital could stoke concerns about the security of oil
shipments from the Middle East.
Oil
prices jumped as traders saw the attacks as the latest incident in a
conflict that is spiraling out of control in the world's richest oil
region.
Brent crude oil
futures LCOc1 rose as high as $59.71 a barrel, up almost 6 percent since
their last settlement, before dipping back to $58.84 a barrel at 0310
GMT, still up $2.36. U.S. crude CLc1 was up $2.19 at $51.40 a barrel.
"There is a big confrontation between Iran
and Saudi (Arabia), between Sunnis and Shi'ites, in Syria and Iraq. This
is more evidence that the geopolitical risk in the Middle East has
become chronic," said Tony Nunan, risk manager at Japan's Mitsubishi
Corp.
Despite the price jump, importers of Middle East oil were not immediately concerned about disruptions.
"Just
because Saudi and others conducted air strikes doesn't mean the oil
market becomes suddenly tight," said Masaki Suematsu, manager of the
energy team at brokerage Newedge Japan in Tokyo.
He cautioned, though, that the conflict could spiral further beyond the airstrikes.
In
South Korea, another big Asian importer, officials said the current
troubles occurred near the Red Sea, waters that Arab Gulf supplies do
not pass through on their way to Asia.
But Arab producers like Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Iraq have to pass Yemen's
coastlines via the tight Gulf of Aden in order to get through the Red
Sea and Suez Canal to Europe.
The narrow waters between Yemen
and Djibouti, at less than 40 kms (25 miles) wide, are considered a
"chokepoint" to global oil supplies by the U.S. Energy Information
Administration and the region is heavily militarized by western navies.
Despite
Thursday's price jumps, oil prices still remain around 50 percent lower
than in June 2014, when prices began to fall as surging global
production was met with slowing demand and lower economic growth,
especially in Asia.
(Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo, Meeyoung Cho in Seoul, and Florence Tan in Singapore; Editing by Richard Pullin and Tom Hogue)
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