As WTI Passes $105, Guardian Says Iran “Military Action Likely”, Would Send Crude Soaring

Sunday, February 19, 2012
By Paul Martin

by Tyler Durden
ZeroHedge.com
02/19/2012

Between the Chinese ‘surprise’ RRR and the Iran export halt to UK and France (and escalating tensions), Oil prices are off to the races this evening. WTI front-month futures have just broken $105 (now up more than 10% in the last two weeks), the highest levels in over nine months and just 8% shy of the 5/2/11 post-recession peak just under $115. Brent (priced in EUR) remains off last week’s intraday highs (as EUR strengthens) but still above the pre-recession peak but in USD it traded just shy of $121 – well above last week’s peak. Of course, this will be heralded as a sign of demand pressure from a ‘growing’ global economy rather than the margin-compressing, implicit-taxation, consumer-spending-crushing supply constraint for Europe and the US that it will become in the not too distant future. As we post, The Guardian is noting that US officials are commenting that “Sanctions are all we’ve got to throw at the problem. If they fail then it’s hard to see how we don’t move to the ‘in extremis’ option.” The impact of any escalation from here is gravely concerning with PIMCO’s $140 minimum and SocGen’s $150-and-beyond Brent prices rapidly coming into focus – and for those pinning their hopes on the Saudis coming to the rescue (and fill the Iranian output gap), perhaps the news that our Middle-East ‘allies’ cut both production and exports in December will stymie any euphoria.

The Rest…HERE

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