Middle East protests impacting oil prices 02/18/2011
FROM THE TELEGRAPH Bahrain killings bring Mid-East turmoil to epicentre of world oil supply Escalating violence in the oil states of the Persian Gulf and North Africa have pushed Brent crude prices to a 30-month high of $104 a barrel, and raised widespread concerns over the stability of global oil supplies for the first time since the Mid-East turmoil began. At least four protesters were killed in a bloody crack-down in Bahrain after tanks entered the capital and security forces smashed a tent city in the main square, opening fire with grapeshot. The situation is fraught with risk since a Sunni monarchy rules a Shia majority with mixed Iranian ancestry and sympathetic ties to Tehran. "Bahrain is the main danger, not because it is intrinsically important, but because it could trigger intervention by Saudi Arabia," said Faysal Itani, a Mid-East expert at consultants Exclusive Analysis. "We have heard reports that the Saudis have already dispatched troops and equipment to put down the uprising". Up to 20 people may have been killed in Libya's "Day of Anger" as the Ghaddafi regime faced its first big threat, while there was a fifth day of violent clashes in Yemen. Iran's plans to send two warships through the Suez Canal to bolster its Syrian ally led to hot words with Israel, notching up tensions further. BNP Paribas said events in the Gulf were setting off a scramble for scarce energy supplies. "Rising oil prices are becoming an increasing threat to the global economy, hitting the net oil consumers of China, Europe, and Japan the most." Credit default swaps (CDS) measuring bond risk in Bahrain have been rising all week, surging another 24 basis points yesterday to 285. The CDS on Saudi Arabia rose 3 to 127, and Egypt pushed back 9 to 360 as the political euphoria gives way to industrial strikes. The Mid-East holds 60pc of the world's proven oil reserves, and makes up 36pc of current supply. READ MORE Add Comment | ArchivesFebruary 2011 The Fake Economy CategoriesAll |


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