
Oil prices stabilized on Thursday (February 12th), as the market reassigned a risk premium to US-Iran tensions despite US inventory data showing swelling domestic supplies. This movement confirms one thing: geopolitical headlines are still more "noise" than signals of a short-term surplus.
As of 3:50 PM WIB, Brent was at $69.60/barrel (+0.29%) and WTI was at $64.83/barrel (+0.31%). The gains were moderate, but enough to keep prices near the psychological $70 level for Brent.
From a geopolitical perspective, market focus is on the potential for escalation in the Middle East. Recent reports indicate the Pentagon has directed a second aircraft carrier strike group to be ready if needed, while the US-Iran diplomatic process remains ongoing with no certainty about the next round's schedule. This combination of "negotiations underway, military options remaining on the table" is keeping traders reluctant to unwind long positions too quickly.
However, the upside room remains "limited" by the supply data. The EIA reported that US crude oil inventories rose by 8.5 million barrels to 428.8 million barrels in the latest week a figure that reinforces the narrative that supplies remain tight, especially if tensions don't escalate into a physical disruption to oil flows.
The bottom line: as long as the Iran threat remains intact, oil is likely to remain supported. But if headlines subside while inventories continue to rise, the market could quickly enter profit-taking mode especially in the Brent area near $70. (arl) [sma]
Source : Newsmaker.id
Oil prices rose on Wednesday (February 11th), supported by a combination of geopolitical risk premiums from US-Iran tensions and more solid Asian demand signals particularly from India which helped ea...
Oil remained in the green zone on Tuesday (February 10th), as the market refused to abandon the Middle East risk premium. As of 13:07 GMT (20:07 WIB), Brent rose +0.4% to $69.32/barrel, while WTI rose...
Oil prices fell about 1% on Monday as concerns about conflict in the Middle East eased slightly. The market calmed after the US and Iran agreed to resume talks on Tehran's nuclear program, reducing fe...
Oil prices moved slightly higher in a volatile session on Friday, as investors assessed the direction of nuclear negotiations between the United States and Iran. Price movements appeared sensitive to ...
Oil prices fell again on Thursday (February 5th) after Iran confirmed it would open negotiations with the United States. This assurance of dialogue eased market concerns over the risk of a direct mili...
Oil prices stabilized on Thursday (February 12th), as the market reassigned a risk premium to US-Iran tensions despite US inventory data showing swelling domestic supplies. This movement confirms one thing: geopolitical headlines are still more...
Gold prices weakened slightly on Thursday (February 12th), as more solid US employment data reduced market confidence in an imminent Federal Reserve interest rate cut. The strong employment data prompted market participants to shift expectations of...
The Hang Seng Index reversed its downward trend in Hong Kong on Thursday (February 12th), weakening by around 0.9% to around 27,000 after a strong session earlier. This decline halted the momentum of the short term rally, as investors began to...