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Argus News - Crude Oil Surges Nearly 10%, Brent Hits $103.40 As US Blockades Strait Of Hormuz

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Oil Price / Crude Oil Surges Nearly 10%, Brent Hits $103.40 As US Blockades Strait Of Hormuz

Patit Mandal
Browse all articles by Patit Mandal
·2 hours ago·2 min read
Crude Oil Surges Nearly 10%, Brent Hits $103.40 As US Blockades Strait Of Hormuz
WTI Jumps To $105.63, MCX Crude Up 7.61% After US-Iran Peace Talks Collapse

Key Points

Brent crude jumped 8.61% to $103.40, WTI surged 9.38% to $105.63 after US Navy announced blockade of Strait of Hormuz.
Mumbai, Apr 13: International crude oil prices surged nearly 10% on Monday, crossing $100 per barrel, after the US Navy moved to blockade the Strait of Hormuz following the collapse of peace talks.

Brent crude futures jumped 8.61 per cent or $8 to hit an intraday high of $103.40. Similarly, US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude traded at $105.63, up 9.38 per cent or $9.

On the domestic front, crude oil futures (April 20 contract) on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) were trading at Rs 9,850, up 7.61 per cent or Rs 697.

The sharp rise in oil prices came after US President Donald Trump announced the US Navy would begin blockading the Strait of Hormuz.

The US President said Iran had “failed to keep the waterway open” and warned that the US would block “any and all ships trying to enter or leave” the Strait, citing concerns over maritime security and potential disruption to global oil supplies.

Notably, the US and Iran had agreed to a two-week ceasefire on April 8, aimed at easing tensions and ensuring the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a key global oil transit route.

However, the latest escalation indicates a breakdown in those efforts, raising concerns over supply disruptions.

Also ReadSensex, Nifty Tumble 2% Amid Weak Global Cues After Failed US-Iran Negotiations

The Strait of Hormuz is a vital transit route for global crude shipments, and any disruption has immediate implications for supply chains and prices.

Meanwhile, domestic equity markets traded lower, with benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty plunging around 2 per cent in early trade amid rising global risk aversion.

In Asian markets, major indices traded in the red, with key indices -- the Nikkei, the Hang Seng, and the KOSPI -- declining over 1 per cent each.

(IANS)
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Oil Price: Crude Oil Surges Nearly 10%, Brent Hits $103.40 As US Blockades Strait Of Hormuz | Argus English