
Oil prices responded immediately to the Iran Israel strikes that unfolded overnight on Sunday into Monday. Brent crude futures opened sharply higher on Monday morning. Moreover, the contract briefly touched $98 a barrel at its intraday peak. Furthermore, that level sits just below the $100 threshold that markets had breached earlier in the ongoing Middle East conflict. Consequently, Brent recently traded up approximately 2 percent as traders priced in the renewed escalation risk.
The exchange of fire between Iran and Israel introduced fresh uncertainty into a market already sensitive to Middle Eastern instability. Moreover, any perceived threat to regional oil production or shipping routes tends to trigger rapid buying in crude futures. Additionally, the overnight strikes extended a pattern of military exchanges that have repeatedly pushed oil prices higher since the conflict intensified earlier in 2026.
What the overnight exchange of fire involved
Iran and Israel exchanged strikes overnight in the most recent escalation of their direct military confrontation. The details of targets and outcomes were still emerging at the time of the market open on Monday morning. Moreover, the Strait of Hormuz situation has remained a key concern for oil markets throughout the conflict given the volume of crude that transits the waterway daily. Furthermore, any indication that shipping routes or production infrastructure could be at risk tends to amplify the market reaction beyond what military events alone would justify.
Brent crude has been volatile throughout the conflict period. At certain points earlier in the fighting, prices crossed $100 a barrel before pulling back. Moreover, Monday’s move toward $98 represents a significant recovery from recent lows but has not yet matched the previous peak. Furthermore, traders are watching closely to see whether the overnight exchange represents a contained incident or the beginning of a more sustained escalation. Consequently, the direction of prices in coming sessions will depend heavily on diplomatic signals and whether further strikes follow.
Why Middle East escalation moves oil markets so dramatically
The connection between Middle East military escalation and oil prices is direct and well established. The region produces a significant share of the world’s crude oil supply. Moreover, major producers including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, and Kuwait all sit within range of potential conflict spillover. Furthermore, the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20 percent of global oil supply passes, remains the single most critical chokepoint in the world’s energy infrastructure.
Any credible threat to Hormuz shipping creates immediate upward pressure on oil prices. Moreover, markets do not wait for actual disruptions to occur before moving. Additionally, the perception of elevated risk is often enough to drive futures higher, especially when military exchanges are happening in close geographic proximity to the strait. Consequently, even a brief exchange of fire between Iran and Israel can push Brent crude significantly higher within hours of the first headlines.
The $100 a barrel level carries psychological weight in oil markets. Moreover, breaching that level historically signals that markets are pricing in serious and sustained supply disruption risk. Furthermore, Brent’s Monday move toward $98 shows that traders are keeping that threshold firmly in view even if they have not yet pushed prices through it. Consequently, the $100 level will remain the key number to watch as the market digests further developments from the region.
What this means for consumers and the broader economy
Rising oil prices flow quickly into everyday costs. Higher crude prices typically push up gasoline prices within days at the retail level. Moreover, jet fuel costs rise alongside crude, which puts pressure on airline ticket pricing and airline profitability. Furthermore, elevated energy costs affect manufacturing, transportation, and food production across the broader economy. Consequently, sustained oil price increases from Middle East escalation carry implications well beyond the energy sector.
Central banks around the world are also watching oil prices carefully in 2026. Energy costs represent one of the main variables that can push inflation higher or lower depending on the direction of crude prices. Moreover, the Federal Reserve and other major central banks have flagged Middle East instability as a key upside risk to their inflation forecasts. Additionally, if Brent crude crosses $100 and holds above that level for an extended period, it could complicate the path toward lower interest rates that many economies are currently pursuing. Consequently, the Iran Israel strikes and their effect on oil prices are carrying economic significance well beyond the immediate market reaction.
Source: The Wall Street Journal / Rebecca Feng




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