Oil Prices Could Test $115 If Hamas-Israel War Escalates Into Regional Conflict
Weakening global economic growth could keep oil prices below $90 per barrel this year and next, barring a major escalation in the Hamas-Israel war that could spill over the Middle East and threaten supply, which could send oil to above $100 and testing $115 a barrel, analysts said in the monthly Reuters poll.
Brent Crude prices are expected to average $84.80 per barrel this year and $86.62 next year, a Reuters survey of 40 analysts and economists found.
So far this year, Brent Crude prices have averaged $82.60 a barrel.
Many analysts see slowing global economic growth as the main bearish factor for oil and don’t see prices holding above $90 a barrel for long, in case the Hamas-Israel conflict is contained and doesn’t involve other state or non-state actors in the Middle East.
But the analysts acknowledge in this month’s poll that the situation in the Middle East could be a major driver of oil prices surging to above $100 per barrel and even testing $115 a barrel if a supply disruption occurs.
Still, even if oil were to hit $100, most of the experts polled by Reuters don’t see prices remaining in the triple digits for long due to downward pressure from slowing economic growth.
Commenting on oil prices early on Tuesday, Saxo Bank’s analysts said,
“Crude oil’s war premium has been erased after Monday’s sharp drop on growing hopes the Israel-Hamas [war] will remain contained, and not spread to Iran, the market’s biggest worry throughout this conflict.”
“Also weighing on prices is the short-term demand outlook which is showing signs of softening.”
Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey, strategists at ING, also believe that the most immediate threat from the new conflict in the Middle East is a possible reduction of Iran’s oil exports if the U.S. tightens the sanction enforcement.
“In the absence of supply disruptions from the region, it is difficult to see a significant and sustained upside in prices,” ING’s Patterson and Manthey said.