Oil Surges Above $100 as Iran Peace
Talks Stall, Markets Turn Cautious
·
Peace
talks setback lifts oil prices:
Markets reacted after President Trump cancelled a negotiators’ trip for Iran
peace talks, reinforcing fears of prolonged conflict and supply disruption.
·
Brent
and WTI rally sharply:
Brent crude rose above $108 per barrel for June delivery, while U.S.
benchmark WTI climbed above $96, reflecting heightened risk premiums.
·
Strait
of Hormuz tensions drive supply fears: Economic warfare around the critical shipping route
continues to threaten global energy flows and support higher oil prices.
·
Stocks
show mixed response:
U.S. futures fluctuated, while Asian markets were divided and European equities
stayed subdued, signaling broader market caution
rather than panic.
·
Energy-importing
economies on alert:
Mixed performance in Asia reflected concerns over higher fuel costs,
particularly for major oil and gas importers.
·
Gasoline
and diesel costs continue rising: U.S. gasoline averaged $4.11 per gallon, up 37%
since the war began, while diesel prices have risen even faster, up roughly
45%.
·
Goldman
Sachs raises oil outlook:
The bank lifted its year-end Brent forecast to $90 per barrel, citing
delayed normalization in Persian Gulf exports and persistent upside risks.
·
Supply
shock could hit demand:
Analysts warn sustained high energy prices may weaken global oil demand, with
projected losses of 1.7 million barrels per day this quarter.
·
Markets
balancing risk and resilience:
While equities have not sold off sharply, rising oil prices and geopolitical
uncertainty are creating volatility across asset classes.
·
Broader
takeaway: The
stalled diplomacy is reinforcing a “higher-for-longer” energy price outlook,
raising risks for inflation, growth, and global financial stability.
[ABS
News Service/27.04.2026]
Oil prices rose and stocks were mixed on Monday (27.04.2026) after
President Trump called off a trip to Pakistan by two of his top negotiators for
a new round of peace talks with Iran.
His latest change of heart leaves the countries locked in a stalemate,
still under a cease-fire agreement but without a clear path to ending the war.
In the meantime, the United States and Iran are trying to inflict
economic damage on each other by strangling shipping through the Strait of Hormuz,
a vital shipping artery that connects the Persian Gulf to buyers around the world.
·
The price of Brent crude, the global
benchmark for oil, rose more than 2 percent, gaining momentum in early trading.
That brought the price of a contract for June delivery to about $108 a barrel, while
the contract for July rose to roughly $102 a barrel. The war has made it difficult
for buyers to secure oil, and many are willing to pay a premium for supplies that
they can get sooner.
·
West Texas Intermediate crude, the
U.S. benchmark, which still references its June contract, rose more than 2 percent
to above $96 a barrel.
·
Futures on the S&P 500 have wavered
ahead of the open for trading in the United States on Monday, shifting between small
losses and gains. The index rose about half a percent last week, recording four
weekly gains in a row since October 2024, in the run-up to the presidential election.
·
Stocks in Asia, where countries import
vast quantities of oil and gas, were mixed. South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index
and Taiwan’s Sensex index rose more than 2 percent. Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose about
1 percent but Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped slightly.
·
In Europe, stocks were subdued. The
Stoxx 600, a broad index that tracks the region’s largest companies, was flat, and
the DAX in Germany gained 0.3 percent.
·
Gas prices rose again on Monday, to
a national average of about $4.11 a gallon, according to the AAA motor club. That
means drivers are paying about 37 percent more for gasoline than they were when
the war started at the end of February. But prices remain several cents below recent
highs hit earlier this month.
·
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 $5.46 on Monday, up around 45 percent since the start
of the war.
·
Analysts at Goldman Sachs upgraded
their forecasts for oil prices, revising their expectations for a “normalization”
of exports from the Persian Gulf by the end of June, from mid-May previously. They
now expect Brent crude to hover around $90 a barrel at the end of the year — up
from a recent call for $80 and well above a prewar forecast of just above $60.
·
Persistently higher energy prices
risk doing economic damage, with demand for oil falling as businesses and households
cut back their consumption. Goldman’s analysts estimate that global oil demand will
fall by 1.7 million barrels per day in the current quarter, and “even sharper demand
losses could be required if the supply shock persists longer.”