Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook

Investing.com - If Friday’s market was any indication, oil gains could be reversed almost as quickly as they are made on news of any thawing of the crisis in the Middle East. The question though is how many hours of relative calm could there be in this conflict before the next headline of an escalation sends traders over the edge again?

More importantly, how long would it take for the oil trade to realize that practically not a single barrel has been lost to the two-week-long Israel-Hamas war to justify a higher and higher war risk premium for crude prices?

This is oil - a commodity that attains its value from demand-related consumption. Unlike gold or the dollar, it’s not a haven to keep benefiting from a mere figment of imagination that supplies are at risk and, therefore, prices have to keep rising - when the reverse is the case.

Many on Wall Street seem to think crude prices should be higher anyway due to the relative proximity of the showdown in Gaza to some of the biggest oil producers, such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq and Kuwait.

While Israel and Gaza themselves barely register in the global oil trade, the Strait of Hormuz straddling them is a key chokepoint for the movement of crude, where a fifth of all oil passes through its waters, seems to be their logic.

Also, the almost daily saber-rattling against Israel by the world's fifth largest oil producer Iran - and concerns of reprisals against Tehran by the Israelis and their main ally, the United States - has added to concerns that something untoward might happen soon.

Yet, some oil traders see the conflict for what it is - a major political event without doubt, but not one that has shown any demonstrable risk so far to the crude trade.

That explains Friday’s modest pullback in crude prices after news that two prisoners held by Hamas since Oct 7 have been released on “humanitarian grounds”.

That retreat in prices came after the first thaw in the two-week-old war. But perspective is important in any situation. The Hamas gesture was super lightweight in the grand scheme of things. By the organization’s own account, there are 200 Israeli hostages in its hold and 50 more held by other armed groups in the enclave. Twenty have already been killed by Israeli air strikes, it says. Those freed do not even account for 2% of the total taken. By any stretch of logic, this isn’t going to stop the Israeli mission to wipe the militant organization off the face of Gaza.

While the notion of a regional contagion from the conflict is valid, it’s also quite a stretch at this point to maintain a near $7 to $10 risk premium on a barrel since the onset of the war - and to keep increasing it with each headline of an escalation in fighting - without commensurate impact on the trade of oil.