Oil prices expected to drop as Israel shows restraint in strikes on Iran (Picture credit: Agencies)
SINGAPORE/LONDON:
Oil prices
are expected to fall when trading resumes on Monday as
Israel
's retaliatory strike on
Iran
over the weekend bypassed Tehran's oil and nuclear infrastructure and did not disrupt
energy supplies
, analysts said.
Brent and US West Texas Intermediate crude futures gained 4% last week in volatile trade as markets priced in uncertainty around the extent of Israel's response to the Iranian missile attack on October 1 and the US election next month.
Scores of Israeli jets completed three waves of strikes before dawn on Saturday against missile factories and other sites near Tehran and in western Iran, in the latest exchange in the escalating conflict between the Middle East rivals.
"The market can breathe a big sigh of relief; the known unknown that was Israel's eventual response to Iran has been resolved," Harry Tchilinguirian, group head of research at
Onyx
said on LinkedIn.
"Israel attacked after the departure of US secretary of state Antony Blinken, and the US administration could not have hoped for a better outcome with
US elections
less than two weeks away."
Iran on Saturday played down Israel's overnight air attack against Iranian military targets, saying it caused only limited damage.
"Israel's not attacking oil infrastructure, and reports that Iran won't respond to the strike remove an element of uncertainty,"
Tony Sycamore
, IG market analyst in Sydney, said.
"It's very likely we see a 'buy the rumour, sell the fact' type reaction when the crude oil futures markets reopen tomorrow," he said, adding that WTI may return to $70 a barrel level.
Tchilinguirian expects
geopolitical risk
premium that had been built into oil prices to deflate rapidly with Brent heading back towards $74-$75 a barrel.
UBS commodity analyst Giovanni Staunovo also expects oil prices to be depressed on Monday as Israel's response to Iran's attack appeared to have been restrained.
"But I would expect such downside reaction to be only temporary, as I believe the market didn't price a large risk premium," he added.