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Brent Crude nears Six-Month High on Iran Attack Concerns

  • US-Iran tensions remain key near-term price driver
  • Markets pricing in geopolitical risk premiums
  • US winter storms, Kazakh outages, also adding support

LONDON, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Brent oil futures prices jumped on Thursday, hitting a near ​six-month high on rising concerns about a possible U.S. military attack on Iran, OPEC's fourth-largest ‌producer with output of 3.2 million barrels per day.

"The immediate (market) concern ... is the collateral damage done if Iran takes a swing at its neighbours or possibly even more tellingly, it closes the Strait of Hormuz to the 20 million barrels per day of oil that navigates it," said PVM analyst John Evans.

Brent crude futures were ‌up $2.61, or 3.8%, to $71.01 a barrel at 1404 GMT, reaching its highest level ​since August 1. The contract is on track to rise over 16% in January, its biggest monthly increase in four years.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up $2.54, or 4%, to $65.75 a barrel. WTI futures earlier ‍reached $65.80 a barrel, a four-month high, and were on track for a 14% monthly gain, the biggest since July 2023.

U.S. President Donald Trump has increased pressure on Tehran to end its nuclear programme, with threats of military strikes and the arrival ⁠of a U.S. naval group in the region.

Trump is considering options that include targeted strikes on security ‍forces and leaders to inspire protesters to potentially topple Iran's rulers, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing U.S. sources familiar with ‌the discussions.

Some ‌analysts are forecasting higher prices because of the Iranian concerns.

"The potential for Iran getting hit has escalated the geopolitical premium of oil prices by potentially $3 to $4 (per barrel)," Citi analysts said in a note on Wednesday, adding that further geopolitical escalation could push prices to as high as $72 a barrel for Brent over ⁠the next three months.

Elsewhere, the ⁠huge Tengiz oilfield in ​Kazakhstan is being restarted in stages after electrical fires cut output last week, with the aim to reach full production in a week.

In the U.S., the world's biggest oil producer and largest liquefied natural gas exporter, crude and gas ‍producers were bringing wells back online after disruption from Winter Storm Fern over the weekend.

"Disruptions in Kazakhstan (CPC terminal, Tengiz field force majeure) have removed significant number of barrels from the market, add up the cold weather in the U.S. which disrupted – although ​temporarily – U.S. crude production and suddenly the oil market is ‍much tighter than expected," UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said.

Reporting by Robert Harvey in London, Sam Li and Trixie Yap in Singapore. Additional ​reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar and Enes Tunagur in London. Editing by Jamie Freed, Alexander Smith and Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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