Oil futures held steady Wednesday with U.S. crude trading above $78 per barrel, after President Joe Biden said Iran might refrain from attacking Israel if a cease-fire deal is reached in Gaza.
Biden told reporters Tuesday afternoon his “expectation” is Iran would not strike Israel if a deal is clinched to stop the fighting in Gaza, though he said efforts to broker a cease-fire are “getting hard.”
A new round of cease-fire talks are scheduled to begin Thursday in Qatar, though Hamas told Reuters that the militant group does not plan to take part in the negotiations.
Here are Wednesday’s energy prices:
- West Texas Intermediate September contract: $78.47 per barrel, up 12 cents, or 0.15%. Year to date, U.S. crude oil has gained about 9.5%.
- Brent October contract: $80.89 per barrel, up 20 cents, or 0.25%. Year to date, the global benchmark is ahead 4.98%.
- RBOB Gasoline September contract: $2.37 per gallon, little changed. Year to date, gasoline is up about 12.8%.
- Natural Gas September contract: $2.22 per thousand cubic feet, up 7 cents, or 3.58%. Year to date, gas is down 11.5%.
Iran has vowed to retaliate against Israel after a Hamas leader was assassinated in Tehran two weeks ago. Israel has put its military on high alert, and the U.S. is dispatching a carrier strike group and guided missile submarine to the region to help defend its ally.
U.S. crude oil prices jumped more than 4% on Monday on escalating tensions between Iran and Israel, but have since pulled back as softening demand in China has weighed on the market.
“There is still a prevailing view in Washington that Iran does not want a regional war, preferring a grey-zone, proxy conflict,” Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, told clients in a research note on Tuesday.
But the White House efforts to contain the conflict may prove difficult, with a cease-fire deal in Gaza still elusive, according to Croft. Delaying an attack by Iran beyond this week “seems precarious,” she wrote.