Now it's beginning.
Oil prices at nine-month high on heels of Iraq violence
Crude
oil prices in Iraq have hit a nine-month high, according to Reuters,
as ongoing violence and fears of instability have led to supply
concerns and equities sales.
RT,
13
June, 2014
Crude
prices went up after Sunni jihadists of the Al-Qaeda splinter group
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS or ISIL) surrounded
the nation’s largest refinery, located in the northern city of
Baiji, leading to concerns of limited output from the second-largest
OPEC producer.
Brent
crude futures went up three percent to $113.27 a barrel, while US
crude rose 2.2 percent, to $106.71 – the highest for both since
September.
The
Thomson Reuters/Jefferies CRB index increased by 1.1 percent on
Thursday, the most in two months.
"If
this conflict knocked out Iraq as an exporter, that would have
significant impact on prices,"
said Christopher Bellew, a trader at Jefferies Bache.
On
Wall Street, energy shares went up in the wake of a spike in oil
prices.
"It's
a bit of a crisis mode here,"
said Timothy Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset
Management LLC in New York, according to Reuters. "Geopolitical
concerns have definitely taken over. It's a very fluid situation and
things are happening very fast, it seems.”
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