Skip to main content

Libyan government soldiers test fire an armoured anti-aircraft gun at the west gate of town Ajdabiyah March 16, 2011.AHMED JADALLAH

Oil prices rallied Thursday on fears of further escalation of geopolitical tension in the Middle East and North Africa.

Oil prices recovered for a second day from three-week lows, which had been sparked by prospects of lower oil demand from earthquake-stricken Japan, and was part of an advance across markets on worries about increasing geopolitical risks, analysts said.

The oil-heavy Reuters-Jefferies CRB index of 19 commodities rose more than 3 per cent, its biggest one-day gain since August 2009.

"The focus is back on continuing unrest in the Middle East and what will be a lot of disruption in Libya for a long time," said Christopher Bellew, an oil trader at Bache Commodities.

"The risk is more to the upside - there was a lot of long liquidation on that sharp sell off at the beginning of the week," he added.

Brent crude for May delivery settled at $114.90 (U.S.), gaining $4.30 or 3.89 per cent, after hitting a session high of $115.39. It was the biggest one-day percentage gain since Feb. 23. Volume at the close was 313,317, lowest since Feb. 21, according to Reuters data.

Brent crude hit a 2-1/2 year high of $119.79 on Feb. 24, on concerns about Libyan production outages as a rebellion seeking his ouster gathered momentum.

U.S. crude for April delivery settled up $3.44, or 3.51 per cent, at $101.42 a barrel, after rallying to $101.99. It was also the biggest one-day percentage gain.

By 3:19 p.m. ET U.S. crude's volume was 513,490, the lowest level since Jan. 3. according to Reuters data, with about two hours left of the day's trading.

U.S. crude's sharp rise was also aided by upbeat data on jobless benefit claims and factory activity in the mid-Atlantic region. Data showing that inflation remained contained despite rising prices also helped boost investor mood.

U.N. BODY TO VOTE ON LIBYA NO-FLY ZONE

The U.N. Security Council scheduled a vote on Thursday evening on a resolution that Britain said would authorize all steps in Libya short of a military occupation to protect Libyan civilians. The vote was scheduled for 6 p.m. ET.

Ahead of the vote, Libyan state TV quoted a statement from Libya's Defense Ministry as saying "any foreign attack on Libya will endanger air and maritime traffic in the Mediterranean basin and expose both short and long term risks."

"The headlines about Libya's response to any potential foreign military act and the crackdown of protesters in Bahrain are adding fuel to the fire and heightening tensions in the Middle East, said Tom Knight, trader at Truman Arnold in Texarkana, Texas.

"Prices have extended higher from yesterday, also aided by positive U.S. economic data today."

"The news that the U.N. Security Council will vote on a resolution to authorize a no-fly zone over Libya and imposing more sanctions against it has helped crude rally here," said Phil Flynn, analyst, at PFGBest Research in Chicago.

Bahrain arrested seven opposition leaders, a day after its crackdown on protests among the Shi'ite Muslim majority drew rare U.S. criticism and raised fears of a regional conflict.

Libyan troops pushed forward towards the insurgent stronghold of Benghazi and launched air raids on its outskirts as Washington raised the possibility of air strikes to stop Muamhar Gaddafi's forces.

In Yemen, security forces used live fire and tear gas on anti-government protesters, wounding at least 84, activities said.

In Japan, Japanese engineers worked through the night to lay an electricity cable to a damaged nuclear power plant in the hope of restarting pumps desperately needed to pour cold water on overheating fuel rods and avert a catastrophe.

Interact with The Globe