Helima Croft: Energy Market Pricing End of U.S.-Iran Conflict Despite Damaged Infrastructure
4 Articles
4 Articles
Oil Prices Are Easing, but Volatility in the Energy Sector May Not Be Over Yet. Here Are 3 Lessons Energy Investors Can Take From the Conflict in Iran.
Key PointsOil prices remain volatile amid persistent supply disruptions.Higher oil prices do not always lead to stronger profits for energy stocks.Geopolitical risks are increasingly driving short-term moves in oil and energy stocks. 10 stocks we like better than ExxonMobil › Wall Street is closely watching how the Iran conflict and the resulting volatility in oil prices could drive inflation and influence the broader economic landscape. The Bre…
A Structural Shift in Capital Allocation in the Energy Sector is Underway Due to the Iran Conflict - Energy News Beat
The 2026 Iran conflict, which escalated in late February with U.S.-Israeli strikes and Iranian retaliation—including the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on energy infrastructure—has triggered the largest supply disruption in global oil market history. Nearly 20% of the world’s oil and significant LNG volumes have been taken offline, sending Brent crude prices surging past $100–$120 per barrel at peaks and doubling European …
The Energy Crisis is Hitting Myanmar Hard
The Iran conflict is disrupting energy supplies and roiling markets globally, with oil prices up by 50 per cent and supplies down 10 per cent. Liquified natural gas (LNG) has also been affected, as have petroleum-based products like urea – whose prices have doubled since December. The OECD projects that the conflict will increase inflation in G20 countries by 1.2 per cent. Numerous countries in Asia are particularly hard-hit, including Myanmar, …
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