logo
Oil prices spike on Iran-Israel tensions, but sustained rally unlikely: TA

Oil prices spike on Iran-Israel tensions, but sustained rally unlikely: TA

Focus Malaysia20-06-2025
THE escalating confrontation between Iran and Israel has reintroduced volatility to global oil markets. Brent crude surged over 8% following Israel's targeted strikes on Iran's nuclear and military infrastructure.
While initial reactions have been strong, TA Securities (TA) believe oil prices could stabilise unless critical assets, such as the Strait of Hormuz, face direct threats.
'We view the geopolitical premium as transient rather than transformative. The sector's risk-reward profile remains balanced, justifying a Neutral call,' said TA.
TA reiterates their preference for oil and gas players with strong export linkages and robust cash generation, such as PANTECH and MISC.
The global oil supply backdrop remains relatively resilient despite the geopolitical turmoil.
OPEC+, led by Saudi Arabia, holds sufficient spare production capacity to offset most short term disruptions from Iran.
According to EIA, global spare production capacity stood at approximately 4.55mn barrels per day (bpd) as of May 2025—primarily held by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iraq.
This aligns with widely cited estimates suggesting that Saudi Arabia alone contributes about 3 mil bpd, while the UAE and Iraq collectively account for an additional 1–1.5 mil bpd.
This spare capacity, defined as oil that can be brought online within 30 days and sustained for at least 90 days, serves as a vital buffer in stabilising markets should Iranian exports (currently ~2 mil bpd) be curtailed.
In parallel, US shale producers continue to deliver robust output levels. Despite a decline in rig counts, production has held steady at 13.4 mil bpd, underscoring the productivity gains from technological efficiency and capital discipline.
Other non-OPEC contributors like Brazil, Canada, and Guyana are also ramping up supply, contributing to a broader narrative of a well-supplied global market.
As such, while the war may add volatility, the probability of a sustained supply shock remains relatively low unless additional producers or infrastructure become targets.
Even amid heightened geopolitical risks, the global demand outlook for oil remains underwhelming.
Structural headwinds, including muted industrial activity in Europe, China's tepid post-COVID recovery, and persistent inflationary pressures across major economies, are weighing on overall energy consumption.
Airlines, a key post-pandemic recovery driver for jet fuel, are also seeing mixed signals. Ticket bookings are strong but jet fuel efficiency gains continue to limit actual oil consumption growth.
Furthermore, the stronger-for-longer interest rate narrative in Western economies has delayed business investment and capped industrial output, particularly in energy-intensive sectors such as manufacturing, construction, and transport.
Overall, while supply-side fears can generate temporary price rallies, the demand picture remains insufficiently supportive for a sustained oil bull cycle without further macroeconomic improvement.
'We retain our Neutral view on the Oil & Gas sector, as we believe the risk-reward balance remains evenly poised,' said TA.
While geopolitical tensions could intermittently support prices, the presence of ample global spare capacity, resilient non-OPEC supply, and muted demand growth limit the probability of a sustained price rally. In this environment, TA favour stock-specific opportunities over a broad sector call.—June 20 2025
Main image: Metro Holding
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australia's Qantas says 6 million customer accounts accessed in cyber hack
Australia's Qantas says 6 million customer accounts accessed in cyber hack

The Star

time3 hours ago

  • The Star

Australia's Qantas says 6 million customer accounts accessed in cyber hack

A member of the ground staff drives past a group of Qantas planes parked at the Qantas Domestic Terminal located at Sydney Airport, Australia, July 26, 2016. REUTERS/David Gray (Reuters) -A cyber hacker broke into a database containing the personal information of millions of customers, Qantas said, in Australia's biggest breach in years and a setback for an airline rebuilding trust after a reputational crisis. The hacker targeted a call centre and gained access to a third-party customer service platform containing six million names, email addresses, phone numbers, birth dates and frequent flyer numbers, Qantas said in a statement on Wednesday. The airline did not specify the location of the call centre or customers whose information was compromised. It said it learnt of the breach after detecting unusual activity on the platform and acted immediately to contain it. "We are continuing to investigate the proportion of the data that has been stolen, though we expect it will be significant," Qantas said, reporting no impact on operations or safety. Last week, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation said cybercrime group Scattered Spider was targeting airlines and that Hawaiian Airlines and Canada's WestJet had already reported breaches. Qantas did not name any group. "What makes this trend particularly alarming is its scale and coordination, with fresh reports that Qantas is the latest victim" of a hack, said Mark Thomas, Australia director of security services for cyber security firm Arctic Wolf. Scattered Spider hackers are known to impersonate a company's tech staff to gain employee passwords and "it is plausible they are executing a similar playbook", Thomas said. Charles Carmakal, chief technology officer of Alphabet-owned cybersecurity firm Mandiant, said it was too soon to say if Scattered Spider was responsible but "global airline organisations should be on high alert of social engineering attacks". Qantas' share price was down 2.4% in afternoon trading against an overall market that was up 0.8%. UNWELCOME ATTENTION The breach is Australia's most high-profile since those of telecommunications network operator Optus and health insurance leader Medibank in 2022 prompted cyber resilience laws including mandatory reporting of compliance and incidents. It brings unwelcome attention to Qantas which is trying to win public trust after actions during and after the COVID-19 pandemic saw it plunge on airline and brand league tables. Qantas was found to have illegally sacked thousands of ground workers during the 2020 border closure while collecting government stimulus payments. It also admitted selling thousands of tickets for already-cancelled flights. The airline drew the ire of opposition politicians who said it lobbied the federal government in 2022 to refuse a request from Qatar Airways to sell more flights. Qantas denied pressuring the government which eventually refused the request - a move the consumer regulator said hurt price competition. Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson has improved the airline's public standing since taking office in 2023, reputation measures showed. "We recognise the uncertainty this will cause," Hudson said of the data breach. "Our customers trust us with their personal information and we take that responsibility seriously." Qantas said it notified the Australian Cyber Security Centre, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner and the Australian Federal Police. ACSC declined to comment and AFP said only that it was aware of the incident. The OAIC was not immediately available for comment. The airline said the hacker did not access frequent flyer accounts or customer passwords, PIN numbers or log in details. (Reporting by Shivangi Lahiri in Bengaluru and Byron Kaye in Sydney; Editing by Rashmi Aich and Christopher Cushing)

FBM KLCI edges up on cautious optimism despite external uncertainties
FBM KLCI edges up on cautious optimism despite external uncertainties

The Star

time4 hours ago

  • The Star

FBM KLCI edges up on cautious optimism despite external uncertainties

KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia ended the morning session on a firmer note, as improved sentiment and selective buying supported the broader market despite lingering external uncertainties. At 12.30 pm, the FBM KLCI rose 6.81 points, or 0.44%, to 1,548.34, just shy of its intraday morning high of 1,549.78. There were 397 gainers, 430 decliners, while 469 stocks remained unchanged. The traded volume stood at 2.1 billion shares worth RM1.2bil. TA Securities noted that local market sentiment is likely to turn cautious, as investors await further clarity on ongoing trade negotiations. It added that a looming deadline next week could see the Trump administration reimpose sweeping tariffs. 'Immediate index support remains at 1,490, with stronger supports found at 1,465, followed by 1,444. 'Immediate resistance stays at 1,564 with next upside hurdles seen at the recent high of 1,586, followed by 1,610 ahead,' TA said. Malacca Securities maintains a positive stance on data centre (DC) and renewable energy (RE) related stocks, given the recent agreement signed by Gamuda with a renewable energy developer. 'Also, with Tenaga Nasional's capex extending into 2H25, we believe this will benefit power infrastructure specialists as well as cable manufacturers. 'On the construction front, we expect the sector to trade on a firmer footing, on the back of higher project billings and anticipation of the final alignment announcement for the ART system in Johor, with an estimated value of RM6bil to RM7bil,' it said. Malaysian Pacific Industries rose 28 sen to RM21.68, PETRONAS Dagangan added 20 sen to RM21.46, Panasonic Manufacturing gained 16 sen to RM11.80 and MISC climbed 15 sen to RM7.70. Meanwhile, consumer stocks were among the top losers on Bursa Malaysia. Dutch Lady dropped 50 sen to RM29.24, F&N fell 28 sen to RM28.80, Ajinomoto eased 10 sen to RM12.80, and Amway declined eight sen to RM5.02. ACE Market debutant, ASM Automation, fell 0.5 sen to 16.5 sen with 45.15 million shares traded.

Oil prices little changed as expectations for OPEC+ increase weigh
Oil prices little changed as expectations for OPEC+ increase weigh

The Star

time4 hours ago

  • The Star

Oil prices little changed as expectations for OPEC+ increase weigh

SINGAPORE: Oil futures were little changed on Wednesday as markets weighed expectations from more supply from major producers next month, a softer U.S. dollar and a mixed bag of economic and market indicators from the U.S., the world's largest oil consumer. Brent crude slipped 4 cents to $67.07 a barrel at 0618 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 9 cents to $65.36 a barrel. Brent has traded between a high of $69.05 a barrel and low of $66.34 since June 25, as concerns of supply disruptions in the Middle East producing region have ebbed following the ceasefire between Iran and Israel. Weighing on prices, sources said American Petroleum Institute data late on Tuesday showed U.S. crude oil inventories rose by 680,000 barrels in the past week at a time when stockpiles typically draw amid the summer demand season. "Today's oil price moves are being pushed by the interplay of potentially rising OPEC+ supply, confusing U.S. inventory signals, uncertain geopolitical outlook, and macro-policy ambiguity," said Phillip Nova senior market analyst Priyanka Sachdeva. However, planned supply increases by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies including Russia, know as OPEC+, appear already priced in by investors and are unlikely to catch markets off-guard again imminently, she added. Four OPEC+ sources told Reuters last week the group plans to raise output by 411,000 barrels per day next month when it meets on July 6, a similar amount to hikes agreed for May, June and July. The market is already seeing the results of the previous OPEC+ increases with Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, lifting shipments in June by 450,000 bpd from May, according to data from Kpler, its highest in more than a year. "With geopolitics at bay for now, oil futures (are likely) to trade within a tighter range this week, as global economic concerns persist, with an 'easing dollar' as the only exception to extend any upward traction," said Sachdeva. The greenback fell to a 3-1/2-year low against major peers earlier on Wednesday and a weaker dollar would support prices as its could spur demand for buyers paying in other currencies. U.S. non-farm payrolls data due on Thursday will shape expectations around the depth and timing of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve in the second half of this year, said Tony Sycamore, analyst at IG. Lower interest rates could spur economic activity which would in turn boost oil demand. Official U.S. oil stockpile data from the Energy Information Administration is due Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. ET. - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store