If You Think the Price of Oil Is Skyrocketing Now, Just Wait Until the War Starts…

Prices up 20 percent after the single largest outage in absolute terms the oil market has ever seen

“If a full-blown war with Iran erupts, nothing is going to be able to calm the markets..the price of oil could easily explode to..four or five times…the equivalent of slamming a baseball bat into the knees of the global economy”

In the aftermath of the most dramatic attack on Saudi oil facilities that we have ever seen, the price of oil has exploded higher. The Wall Street Journal is calling this attack “the Big One”, and President Trump appears to be indicating that some sort of military retaliation is coming.  Needless to say, a direct military strike on Iran could spark a major war in the Middle East, and that would be absolutely devastating for the entire global economy.

Just about everything that we buy has to be moved, and moving stuff takes energy. When the price of oil gets really high, that tends to create inflation because the price of oil is a factor in virtually everything that we buy. In addition, a really high price for oil also tends to slow down economic activity, and this is something that we witnessed just prior to the financial crisis of 2008.

And if this crisis in the Middle East stretches over an extended period of time, it could ultimately result in a phenomenon known as “stagflation” where we have rapidly rising prices and weaker economic activity simultaneously. The last time we experienced such a thing was in the 1970s, and nobody really remembers the U.S. economy of the 1970s favorably.

The damage caused by the “drone attacks” in Saudi Arabia was immense. According to the Daily Mail, “huge plumes of black smoke” could be seen pouring out of a key Saudi oil facility…

Infernos raged at the plant in Abqaiq, Bugayg, and the country’s second largest oilfield in Khurais yesterday morning after Tehran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen fired a flurry of rockets.

Huge plumes of black smoke could be seen coming from the oil facility.

Houthi rebels in Yemen have publicly taken responsibility for the attacks, but they may or may not be telling the truth.

At this point, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is completely rejecting that explanation, and he is claiming that there is “no evidence the strikes had come from Yemen”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blamed Iran for coordinated strikes on the heart of Saudi Arabia’s oil industry, saying they marked an unprecedented attack on the world’s energy supply.

The strikes shut down half of the kingdom’s crude production on Saturday, potentially roiling petroleum prices and demonstrating the power of Iran’s proxies.

Iran-allied Houthi rebels in neighboring Yemen claimed credit for the attack, saying they sent 10 drones to strike at important facilities in Saudi Arabia’s oil-rich Eastern Province. But Mr. Pompeo said there was no evidence the strikes had come from Yemen.

And according to Reuters, another unnamed “U.S. official” told them that the attacks came from “west-northwest of the targets”…

The U.S. official, who asked not to be named, said there were 19 points of impact in the attack on Saudi facilities and that evidence showed the launch area was west-northwest of the targets – the direction of Iran – not south from Yemen.

The official added that Saudi officials had indicated they had seen signs that cruise missiles were used in the attack, which is inconsistent with the Iran-aligned Houthi group’s claim that it conducted the attack with 10 drones.

Of course drones don’t have to travel in a straight line, and cruise missiles don’t either, and so we may never know for sure where the attacks originated.

But we do know that the Houthi rebels in Yemen are being backed by Iran, and we also know that the Shia militias in Iraq are also being backed by Iran.

So whether the attacks originated in Yemen, southern Iraq or Iran itself, it is not going to be too difficult for U.S. officials to place the blame on the Iranians, and we should expect some sort of military response.

In fact, President Trump posted the following message to Twitter just a little while ago

Saudi Arabia oil supply was attacked. There is reason to believe that we know the culprit, are locked and loaded depending on verification, but are waiting to hear from the Kingdom as to who they believe was the cause of this attack, and under what terms we would proceed!

Of course U.S. airstrikes against Iran itself could ultimately spark World War 3, and most Americans are completely clueless that we could literally be on the precipice of a major war.

According to the Saudis, the equivalent of 5.7 million barrels a day of oil production were affected by the attacks. Saudi Arabia typically produces about 9.8 million barrels a day, and so that is a really big deal.

When the markets reopened on Sunday night, oil futures exploded higher.  In fact, according to Zero Hedge this was the biggest jump ever…

With traders in a state of near-frenzy, with a subset of fintwit scrambling (and failing) to calculate what the limit move in oil would be (hint: there is none for Brent), moments ago brent reopened for trading in the aftermath of Saturday’s attack on the “world’s most important oil processing plant“, and exploded some 20% higher, to a high of $71.95 from the Friday $60.22 close, its biggest jump since futures started trading in 1988.

As I write this article, the price of Brent crude is currently sitting at $66.89, although at least one analyst is warning that the price of oil could soon shoot up to “as high as $100 per barrel” if the Saudis are not able to quickly resume their previous level of production…

The oil market will rally by $5-10 per barrel when it opens on Monday and may spike to as high as $100 per barrel if Saudi Arabia fails to quickly resume oil supply lost after attacks over the weekend, traders and analysts said.

Saudi officials have already told us that they anticipate that a third of the lost oil output will be restored on Monday.

But because of the extensive damage that has been done, restoring the remainder of the lost output could take “weeks” or even “months”.

In the short-term, President Trump has authorized the release of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and that should help stabilize prices somewhat.

However, if a full-blown war with Iran erupts, nothing is going to be able to calm the markets. In such a scenario, the price of oil could easily explode to a level that is four or five times higher than it is today, and that would essentially be the equivalent of slamming a baseball bat into the knees of the global economy.

The times that we are living in are about to become a whole lot more serious, but most Americans are not even paying attention to these absolutely critical global events.

In fact, even the mainstream media seems to believe that the new allegations against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh are more important.

That is because they don’t understand what is really happening.

Trust me, keep a close eye on the Middle East, because things are about to start breaking loose there in a major way.

Source: The Economic Collapse

9 Comments
  1. John Rourke says

    not likely the US will enter a War with Iran other than their normal Sanctions and “Bluff Talking”.

    1. DarkEyes says

      Metinks in the same way. The Donald thinks he might win a second term but only is there is no war before that time.
      The bodybags then, arriving in USA will not be appreciated by the American people.

  2. Mikhail Garchenko says

    https://www.moonofalabama.org/2019/09/damage-at-saudi-oil-plant-points-to-well-targeted-swarm-attack.html#more

    I´ll quote from this article:
    “Attacks of this kind will only end when Saudi Arabia makes peace with
    Yemen and when the U.S. ends its sanctions of oil exports from Iran. As
    Iran’s President Rouhani said:
    “If one day they want to prevent the export of Iran’s oil, then no oil will be exported from the Persian Gulf”
    It is high time for hawks like Pompeo to recognize that Iran means what it says and has the tools to fulfill that promise.”
    That´s all, folks..! “Game Over”. 😛

  3. CHUCKMAN says

    Dimona plus concentrations of US troops in the region and US warships and perhaps other ultra-sensitive targets of which we are not aware.

    The Iranians have proved they have the missiles and they are accurate.

    It’s a lot for the US to risk, and so very many times Trump has bellowed about this or that and then then quieted down.

    1. DarkEyes says

      Let’s believe it helped when The Donald refused to prolong the hiring-contract with Duke Mr Bolton.

      Duke Bolton has now time on his hand to prepare and assist Killary’s presidential election. He knows (now more or less exactly) how The Donald “ticks”.

      Jared of Arabia with Princess Ivanka will help in the meantime to get granddad out of the White House and welcome the Democrats.

      US, what a wonderful place to live and work!

  4. BillA says

    I find myself in conflict; while I have no desire that the US strike Iran, Iran’s response will include Dimona = wonderful

    1. DarkEyes says

      And deadly!

  5. JustPassingThrough says

    price of oil will be the last thing the murikans will have to worry about if this goes full tilt.
    D.T. will lose the election and maybe part of the vaunted usn.
    Bibi will lose the election because tel aviv will be a pile of rubble.
    the Sow-dees will be moving in with their goats.

    1. Augustus says

      I think the Sow-dees will be strung up and shot. There will be no more Saudi-Arabia…it will just be Arabia. No Sow-dees left.

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