The oil price surge triggered by the escalating conflict between the United States, Israel and Iran dominated global markets on Monday. The oil price surge followed coordinated strikes that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several senior officials according to AFP.
The developments raised fears of a prolonged regional conflict and major disruptions to oil supplies from the Strait of Hormuz which handles nearly 20 percent of the world’s seaborne crude shipments.
Asian markets fall as crude jumps sharply
Brent and WTI spike amid supply concerns
Oil prices surged at the opening of Asian trading with Brent rising almost 14 percent and West Texas Intermediate nearly 12 percent before easing to gains closer to five percent. In Tokyo and Hong Kong markets dropped sharply and airline stocks saw heavy losses as carriers canceled flights to the region.
Gold rose about two percent and the US dollar strengthened as investors sought safe haven assets.
Shipping risks escalate in the Strait of Hormuz
Multiple ships were struck near Oman and the UAE according to UK maritime security agency UKMTO. Iranian state television reported that an oil tanker was hit and sinking after what it described as an attempt to pass through the strait illegally.
Although Iran has not officially closed the strait its Revolutionary Guards have warned ships against transiting the waterway. The increased risk has pushed insurers to raise costs dramatically and major shipping companies have begun suspending passage through the area.
Regional escalation adds pressure on global economy
Iranian retaliation and Gulf tensions
Iran continued its missile and drone campaign in the Gulf where UAE officials confirmed four people were killed and dozens wounded. Tel Aviv launched attacks on Lebanon after Hezbollah fired rockets in response to Khamenei’s killing.
Energy prices expected to remain volatile
Analysts warned that any prolonged disruption to Hormuz could lift crude prices to ninety dollars or even above one hundred dollars per barrel. Gas prices also surged because Qatar is a major LNG exporter adding inflationary pressure to global markets.
Economists said rising energy and transport costs could slow international growth if the situation persists.
OPEC plus production increase fails to calm markets
Voluntary Eight announce higher output
Key OPEC plus members including Saudi Arabia Russia Iraq Kuwait Oman the UAE Algeria and Kazakhstan agreed to raise production by 206000 barrels per day starting in April. The move exceeded earlier expectations but analysts stressed it would have little impact if logistical routes remain threatened.
H3: Analysts warn of limited alternatives
Rystad Energy estimated that closure of the Strait of Hormuz could remove eight to ten million barrels per day from global supply far exceeding the OPEC plus increase. Even with alternative pipelines in Saudi Arabia and the UAE the gap remains too large to offset a full maritime shutdown.
Some analysts noted that high prices could push non OPEC producers such as the United States Brazil and Canada to ramp up production.
Conclusion:
With the Iran conflict escalating and disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz widening investors remain focused on the risk of prolonged supply interruptions and rising energy prices. Markets are expected to stay volatile as geopolitical tensions continue.






