OIL prices jumped to a nine-month high above US$105 a barrel yesterday after Iran said it halted crude exports to Britain and France in an escalation of a dispute over the Middle Eastern country's nuclear program.
By yesterday afternoon, benchmark March crude was up US$2.02 to US$105.26 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest since May. The contract rose 93 cents to settle at US$103.24 per barrel in New York on Friday.
Iran's announcement will likely have minimal impact on supplies, analysts said, because only about 3 percent of France's oil consumption is from Iranian sources. Britain had not imported oil from the Islamic republic in six months.
"The price rise is more a reflection of concerns about the further escalation in tensions between Iran and the West," said commodity analyst Caroline Bain of the Economist Intelligence Unit. "Banning the tiny quantities of exports to the UK and France involves very little risk for Iran - indeed quite the opposite, it catches the headlines and leads to a higher global oil price, which is something Iran is very keen to encourage."
Markets in the United States are closed yesterday for the Presidents Day holiday.
Iran's oil ministry said Sunday it stopped crude shipments to British and French companies in an apparent pre-emptive blow against the European Union after the bloc imposed sanctions on Iran's crucial fuel exports. They include a freeze of the country's central bank assets and an oil embargo set to begin in July.
Iran's Oil Minister Rostam Qassemi had warned earlier this month that Tehran could cut off oil exports to "hostile" European nations. The 27-nation EU accounts for about 18 percent of Iran's oil exports.
Tehran also is considering extending the embargo to other European countries, a semiofficial Iranian news agency reported yesterday.
The head of Iran's state oil company Ahmad Qalehbani was quoted by the Mehr agency as saying that the country would stop selling crude to nations who take action against Tehran.
The EU sanctions, along with other punitive measures imposed by the US, are part of Western efforts to derail Iran's disputed nuclear program, which the West fears is aimed at developing atomic weapons. Iran denies the charges, and says its program is for peaceful purposes.
Oil prices also rose on hopes that Greece's new bailout deal will be approved yesterday as well as by China's decision to boost money supply bid to spur lending and economic growth. China's central bank said Saturday it will lower the ratio of funds that banks must hold as reserves, a move that frees tens of billions of dollars.
Oil has jumped from US$96 earlier this month amid optimism the global economy may grow more this year than previously expected. J.P. Morgan raised its Brent crude price forecast to as high as US$135 from US$120 - yesterday, the April Brent crude contract was up 79 cents at US$120.37 per barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
"Building economic momentum has the potential to pull oil prices higher for the next 12 to 24 months," J.P. Morgan said in a report.
In other energy trading in March contracts, heating oil gained 3 cents to US$3.22 per gallon and gasoline futures rose 3.2 cents to US$3.22 per gallon. Natural gas lost 7 cents to US$2.62 per 1,000 cubic feet.