Oil Hits $110 Again Amid Middle East Conflict; Asian Markets Mixed
·
Oil
Prices Rise:
o
Brent
crude at ~$109/barrel (+60% since war began)
o
West
Texas Intermediate crude at ~$111/barrel (+66% overall)
·
Conflict
Impact:
o
Ongoing U.S.–Iran
conflict (6th week) disrupting global energy markets
o
Threats
of escalation by Donald Trump
·
Strategic
Chokepoint Disruption:
o
Strait of
Hormuz largely disrupted
o
Handles ~20%
of global oil supply
o
Shipping
traffic mostly halted
·
Energy
Infrastructure Attacks:
o
Continued
strikes in Iran and Gulf region
o
Risk of long-term
supply damage
·
Limited
Global Trading Activity:
o
Markets
closed in parts of Asia & all of Europe due to holidays
o
Lower
trading volumes globally
·
Asian
Markets Mixed:
o
Nikkei
225 up 0.6%
o
Gains in
Japan & South Korea
o
Markets
closed in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan
·
U.S.
Market Outlook:
o
S&P
500 futures mostly flat
o
Index
down ~6% from recent peak, nearing correction earlier
·
Fuel
Prices Surge:
o
Gasoline:
$4.12/gallon (+38%)
o
Diesel: $5.62/gallon
(+49%)
o
Prices
lag crude but rising sharply
·
Economic
Risks:
o
Higher
energy costs may drive global inflation
o
Threat to
electricity, water, and fuel access in vulnerable regions
Oil prices rose slightly and stocks in Asia
were mixed on Monday (06 April, 2026) despite continued attacks in the Middle East
and threats by President Trump to escalate U.S. attacks on Iran. Trading was limited
because markets were closed for holidays in parts of Asia and all of Europe.
Mr. Trump taunted Iranian leaders on Sunday
after the U.S. rescue of an American airman whose jet had been shot down. The president
demanded that Iran open the Strait of Hormuz, a vital passageway for oil shipments
in the Middle East.
The conflict, now in its sixth week, has caused
energy shocks that could drive up the cost of living around the world and deprive
vulnerable regions of staples like electricity, clean water and cooking fuel.
·
The price of
Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil, was about $109 a barrel on Monday, up
0.1 percent. That was around a 60 percent increase in price since before the war
began.
·
West Texas
Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark, traded for around $111 a barrel on Monday,
down slightly, but a rise of about 66 percent in the same period. The W.T.I. price
is usually not above Brent — the gap is partly the result of differences in each
oil type’s futures contracts, which are the main way for trading oil.
·
Since fighting
began, investors and analysts have been focused on the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow
waterway between Iran and Oman that is a vital trading route for oil and natural
gas and that normally carries as much as one-fifth of the world’s oil supply. Shipping
traffic exiting the Persian Gulf through the strait has been effectively halted
since the war began.
·
A French-owned
container ship transited the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, according to data from
Marine Traffic, making it among the few known Western-owned ships to have traversed
the waterway since the start of the war.
·
Continued attacks
on energy infrastructure, by both Israel and Iran, have raised concerns about longer-lasting
damage to the world’s oil and gas supply. Attacks on power and energy facilities
continued in Iran and throughout the Gulf region on Sunday.
·
Stocks rose
in Japan and South Korea, with the Nikkei 225 in Japan up 0.6 percent. Other indexes
in Asia were lower, and markets in Hong Kong, mainland China and Taiwan were closed.
Stocks in Asia had mostly declined on Friday.
·
S&P 500
futures were mostly unchanged, providing little indication of how stocks will move
when trading resumes in the United States on Monday. Through Thursday, the S&P
500 was down nearly 6 percent since it hit a peak in late January. It came dangerously
close to what is known as a correction — a drop of 10 percent from a recent high
— before stocks recovered.
·
Gas prices
rose again on Monday, jumping to a national average of $4.12 a gallon, according
to the AAA motor club. The increase has raised the cost for drivers by 38 percent
since the war began.
·
Gas prices
don’t move in lock step with crude, usually trailing increases or drops by a few
days.
·
Diesel prices
have increased even more quickly and stood at $5.62 on Monday, up 49 percent since
the start of the war.