OIL prices fell more US$2 on Monday (Nov 25) after multiple reports that Israel and Lebanon had agreed to the terms of a deal to end the Israel-Hizbollah conflict, citing unnamed senior US officials.
Brent crude futures were down US$2.02, or 2.69 per cent, at US$73.15 a barrel by 9.57 am CST (1557 GMT), while US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were down US$2.08, or 2.92 per cent, at US$69.16 a barrel.
Israel said on Monday that it is moving towards a ceasefire in the war with Hizbollah but there are still issues to address, while Lebanese officials voiced guarded optimism but said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not to be trusted.
“It seems the news of a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon is behind the price drop, though no supply has been disrupted due to the conflict between the two countries and the risk premium in oil has been low already before the latest price decline,” said Giovanni Staunovo of UBS.
Oil markets are being pushed up and pulled down on rising or falling supply disruption fears, Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group, said in a Monday note.
“A report that Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu approves Lebanon ceasefire deal in principle could be a bearish catalyst, yet we must see more details as they become available. Last week the world was stunned as Russia launched supersonic missiles” at Ukraine, Flynn wrote in his Energy Report.
Both Brent and US WTI contracts last week notched their biggest weekly gains since late September to reach their highest settlement levels since Nov 7 after Russia fired a hypersonic missile at Ukraine in a warning to the US and the UK following strikes by Kyiv on Russia using US and British weapons. REUTERS
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