Iran war drives oil prices above $100 a barrel for first time since 2022
Donald Trump insists surge in energy prices is ‘very small price to pay’ as Middle East conflict sparks fresh stock market sell-off
Global oil prices surged past $100 (£74, AU$142) a barrel for the first time since 2022 as fallout from the US-Israel war with Iran continues to wipe 20m barrels of oil from the market each day.
A weekend of escalating violence in the Middle East intensified concerns around a sustained supply crunch, propelling oil prices to their highest level in four years and triggering a deep stock market sell-off.
At least five energy sites in and around Tehran were hit by strikes, prompting accounts of “apocalyptic” scenes in the Iranian capital. Kuwait’s national oil company also announced a precautionary production cut amid retaliatory attacks by Iran.
The strait of Hormuz – one of the world’s most important trade arteries, through which about a fifth of global oil and seaborne gas tankers typically pass – has been in effect closed for a week.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, jumped 17.1% to $108.52 per barrel as the new week’s trading began in the Asia Pacific markets, the first time market prices have soared above this key psychological threshold since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) benchmark price of US crude also soared, rising 15.9% to $105.35 per barrel.
The extraordinary spike in oil prices is “a very small price to pay” for the US “and World, Safety and Peace”, Donald Trump argued on Sunday, describing it as a “short term” consequence of the US-Israel war on Iran. They “will drop rapidly when the destruction of the Iran nuclear threat is over”, the US president claimed on social media.
The Iranian regime warned that US-Israeli strikes risk pushing prices even higher. “If you can tolerate oil at more than $200 per barrel, continue this game,” a spokesperson for the country’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) said after the weekend’s strikes on energy sites.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 5% in Tokyo on Monday, setting up another turbulent week for global equity markets, as South Korea’s Kospi slumped 6.6%. Australia’s ASX 200 finished a volatile day of trading down 2.9%.
Adding further instability to the markets, Bahrain’s state oil company declared force majeure for its shipments after an Iranian attack set its refinery ablaze.
The state-run Bahrain News Agency carried the announcement of the force majeure, a legal maneuver that releases a company of its contractual obligations because of extraordinary circumstances. It said the company’s operations “have been affected by the ongoing regional conflict in the Middle East and the recent attack on its refinery complex”. It insisted that local demand could still be met.
Pre-market trading data put Wall Street on course to open lower, with the Dow Jones industrial average and benchmark S&P 500 futures down by 1.5%.
Oil prices returned to triple digits after the highest weekly gains since the Covid pandemic six years ago, and included a $10 increase in the price of US crude on Friday alone.
“The grace period given by the market to the Trump administration expired at the end of last week,” according to Clayton Seigle, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“A deficit of 20m barrels per day is hitting global [oil market] balances with no sign of relief. To the contrary, President Trump is demanding unconditional surrender, a very unlikely prospect. While observers may have initially thought his disregard for painful oil prices was a bluff, it’s now clear that it isn’t,” he said.
The Trump administration has tried in recent days to reassure investors that the recent disruption within the oil and gas industries will not last long. “In the worst case, this is a weeks, this is not a months thing,” the US energy secretary, Chris Wright, claimed on CNN on Sunday.
Such statements appear to have fallen on deaf ears.
Overall, oil prices have rocketed by two-thirds from just above $60 a barrel at the start of the year. Prices had already risen in January and February, before accelerating after the US-Israeli attack on Iran just over a week ago, which has disrupted a vital trade route for Middle Eastern oil supplies through the strait of Hormuz.
Fears of a global oil shortfall were compounded late last week by Qatar’s energy minister, who predicted that if the war continued unabated all Gulf energy exporters would be forced to shut down production within weeks and oil would rise to $150 a barrel.
Oil storage facilities in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait are reaching their limits, meaning major oilfields may need to be shut down if crude cannot be exported via the strait of Hormuz to the global market.
Hundreds of tankers attempting to transit the strait have come to a halt after Iran’s Revolutionary Guards threatened to “set ablaze” any vessel using the trade route, which carries a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas.
Across Asia, which is particularly reliant on energy imports from the Middle East, countries are scrambling to mitigate a supply crisis.
South Korea announced a cap on domestic fuel prices for the first time in nearly 30 years. The current crisis “is a significant burden on our economy”, its president Lee Jae Myung said, “which is highly dependent on global trade and energy imports from the Middle East”.
Lee also said South Korea would search for energy sources beyond supplies shipped via the strait of Hormuz, and that a 100tn won ($66.94bn, £50.24bn) market stabilisation programme should be expanded if needed.
Bangladesh announced plans to close all universities from Monday, bringing forward the Eid al-Fitr holidays as part of an emergency bid to conserve electricity and fuel.
Government officials in Japan have meanwhile instructed a national oil reserve storage site to prepare for a possible release of crude, Akira Nagatsuma, a member of the Centrist Reform Alliance opposition party, told the Reuters news agency.