Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - It has taken nearly three years but geopolitics is back like never before in oil as a Saudi-Iran face-off raises the specter of a new Gulf war that’s front-loading crude prices. There’s just one problem for oil bulls though: The U.S.-China trade war is blowing out at the same time, and the fallout to the global economy from that could offset much of the positive impact brought on by the geopolitical risk to crude that’s spiking in the Middle East.

The trade war is also sending gold in all directions as investors try to decide whether the yellow metal or the U.S. dollar is a more worthy hedge

As OPEC holds a preliminary meeting today ahead of its June 25 decision on production cuts, sparks will likely fly between Riyadh and Tehran as they sit across each other as partners of the cartel despite their epic enmity. The Saudis accuse Iran of masterminding this week's sabotage of the kingdom's oil industry after Houthi rebels, known for their support of Tehran, claimed responsibility for drone attacks on two Saudi oil pumping stations. Earlier in the week, both the UAE and Saudi Arabia reported that their oil tankers in the Gulf were hit by projectiles, implying that the Iranians had a hand in that too. The Islamic Republic, on the other hand, has yet to forgive the two for their support of the Trump administration in the U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil.

What happens in today’s OPEC meeting is for another day’s telling, but, for now, back to what happened in the week that was in oil.

Energy Review

Crude futures rowed back much of the week’s early gains after China’s state-run media expressed impatience over the trade negotiations, after Huawei and other Chinese companies were shown the door from the U.S. market.

Brent futures, the U.K.-traded global benchmark for oil, closed at $72.21 per barrel, finishing Friday’s trade down 41 cents, or 0.6%. West Texas Intermediate futures, the benchmark for U.S. crude, settled at $62.76, down 11 cents, or 0.2%, on the day.

It had been an extraordinary week in oil, with Brent earlier soaring to a one-month high of $73.36 and WTI hitting a two-week peak of $63.64, on fear that a new war might break out in the Persian Gulf after Saudi Arabia accused Iran of sabotaging the kingdom's oil infrastructure.

Iran, officially barred from selling its crude under U.S. sanctions, had previously warned other oil exporters of "consequences" for supporting the action by President Donald Trump. But it denies charges of trying to sabotage Saudi oil facilities through its Houthi rebel allies, who have claimed responsibility for at least two drone attacks on Saudi oil pumping stations.