Crude prices rose as much as 6 per cent on Thursday after Saudi Arabia and its allies launched air strikes on Yemen, pushing shares lower in Europe, West Asia and Asia and lifting oil producers’ currencies.
The military operations, including air strikes, targeted Iran-backed Houthi rebels besieging the southern Yemen city of Aden. Arab producers ship oil via the Gulf of Aden and Suez Canal to Europe.
The escalating tensions in West Asia pushed the prices of Brent crude up more than $3 a barrel to close to $60, a 2 1/2-week high. It last traded at $59.17, up 4.7 per cent.
“Oil is having a nice move after more geopolitical tensions in the Middle East over Yemen. Saudi has intervened via a military operation but, to be clear, (it) has at the moment led to no disruptions in oil supply,’’ said Atif Latif, director of trading at Guardian Stockbrokers in London.
Oil price slide
A vertiginous slide in oil prices, from more than $115 a barrel last June to a low of $45 in January, has been a major driver of financial markets in the past year and a key factor driving monetary policy.
The fall has cut the living costs for consumers across the globe but has triggered fears of growth-sapping deflation. More than two dozen central banks have eased policy, driving yields on many low-risk bonds into negative territory.
Global stocks
European shares followed Asian stocks lower. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index fell almost 1.5 per cent. In Germany, a major industrial economy heavily dependent on oil imports, the DAX index fell 1.8 per cent.
However, the STOXX Europe 600 oil and gas index was up 0.8 per cent.
Middle East stocks markets fell sharply. Dubai’ DFM index dropped more than 3 per cent. The main Saudi index was down 0.55 per cent.
Asian shares fell. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan eased 0.8 per cent, Australia’s main index shed 1.4 per cent, while Japan’s Nikkei lost 1.6 per cent in its biggest daily decline since mid-January.
Dollar vs yen
The dollar fell. It lost 0.8 per cent against Japan’s yen, which stood at 118.51 to the dollar.
The euro was up 0.6 per cent at $1.1029, having risen from a 12-year low of $1.0457 touched last week.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of its peers, dropped 0.8 per cent.
The currency has risen steadily in recent months on the prospect of a first US interest rate rise since 2006 but its ascent has lost steam since the Federal Reserve last week made clear it was in no hurry to tighten policy and after weak data.
“We have been talking about it being the beginning of the end and that’s still the way I would characterise it,’’ said Daragh Maher, currency strategist with HSBC in London.
Oil’s rise was a fillip for the rouble, which gained 1.4 per cent to 62.14 to the dollar. Russia is a major producer and the oil price is a key factor in government finances.
Yields on German government bonds, the benchmark for euro zone borrowing costs, nudged lower, though the prospect of more expensive oil sparking inflation limited falls. Ten-year Bunds yielded 0.217 per cent, down 0.6 basis points on the day.
“The impact of Saudi Arabia’s air strikes in Yemen is complex,’’ said Mizuho strategist Peter Chatwell.
“It’s geopolitical risk, so Bund bullish, but the rise in the oil price should push expectations of headline inflation higher over the coming months.’’
Gold rose more than 1 per cent to $1,211.20 an ounce, supported by weak dollar and tensions in West Asia.