Oil prices fall back after a short-lived surge in early trading


The price of oil was essentially flat between us on Monday morning after opening our time on Sunday evening after the Trump administration’s military strike to Iran.

Even the initial rise in prices was considered somewhat overwhelming compared to more apocalyptic predictions that were heard before the attack.

However, from the trucking industry’s perspective, the most attention was the continued strength of diesel compared to crude oil and petrol.

Around 7:05pm on EDT, about an hour after trading began on various exchanges, global crude oil benchmark Brent rose to $1.88/barrel to $78.89/b, a profit of 2.44%. The US benchmark crude grade, West Texas Intermediate, rose 2.52% to $75.70/b, earnings of $1.86/b. RBOB petrol is a semi finished gasoline product that serves as a trading platform for finished petrol, up 2.19% to $2.3806/gallon, an increase of 5.11 CTS/g. (RBOB is essentially gasoline that does not add ethanol).

However, the biggest increase on Sunday evening was ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD). A rise of 3.67% to $2.6352/g, an increase of 9.34 cts/g.

In a surprising reversal, by 9:30am, oil prices had levelled off from the CME Commodity Exchange’s Friday settlement.

Just before 9:30, ULSD fell by about 25 basis points, or .09%. WTI increased by .08%, while Brent was below 0.2%.

There is then news that two oil tankers that initially made a U-turn to avoid passing through the straits, reversed their decision and helped the market somehow calm anyway.

In an interview with Bloomberg Television, in a Bloomberg report by Bloomberg, Bob McNally, founder of Rapidun Energy Advisors LLC and a longtime Washington Energy Officer, said that previous profits in the market had already shifted prices to levels that reflected the potential for disruption.

“We’ve increased by $10 a barrel since the war began. I think there’s a little more risk in the market right now,” he said. “Traders are holding their breath and are waiting to see if Israel or Iran will expand this conflict beyond military and political targets to traded energy.

If ULSD settles at that level on Monday afternoon in the US, it will be the best price since the $2.6513/g settlement on April 16, 2024.

In the weeks leading up to US attacks at Iran’s nuclear facilities, the most bullish scenario for the oil market is the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, a gateway to the Persian Gulf, and a route to oil exports from many countries, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq and Irakin.

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