Oil prices fall after Brent briefly touches $119

Oil prices fall after Brent briefly touches $119

March 20, 2026   06:24 am

U.S. oil prices gave up gains on Thursday after Israel said it was helping reopen the key Strait of Hormuz passageway.

International benchmark Brent crude futures with May added 1.18% to end at $108.65 per barrel, reversing lower after briefly climbing above $119 earlier in the session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures slipped 0.19% to $96.14 after trading higher in the day.

U.S. oil prices fell in extended trading as Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to the media, saying that Israel was helping the U.S. open the Strait of Hormuz, according to wire reports. Netanyahu also said that Iran had lost the ability to enrich uranium and make ballistic missiles. The prime minister said the war may end sooner than people think.

Vice President JD Vance attended a meeting with U.S. oil industry members on Thursday hosted by the American Petroleum Institute. Opening Hormuz is a “top priority” for the Trump administration, Mike Sommers, API’s president and CEO, told CNBC following the meeting.

“We need to get the Strait open,” Sommers said on Thursday. “There is just no substitute right now.”

A White House official confirmed to CNBC that oil and gas export restrictions are not currently under consideration.

The front-month gas price at the Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF) hub, a European benchmark for natural gas trading, traded up over 11% at around 61 euros per megawatt-hour.

U.S. natural gas prices were last seen 1.7% higher, trading at $3.116 per million British thermal units. Front-month Nymex RBOB gasoline for April delivery, meanwhile, rose almost 1% to $3.13 and hit a nearly four-year high.

Iran strikes

Iranian missile strikes inflicted “extensive damage” on Ras Laffan Industrial City, the world’s largest LNG export facility in the world, Qatar said.

Emergency crews were dispatched to tackle fires at Ras Laffan, QatarEnergy said in a social media post, adding there were no reported casualties. QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi said the Iran attack took out 17% of the country’s liquefied natural gas export capacity.

Qatar’s Interior Ministry later said the blaze had been brought under control.

Qatar’s foreign Ministry condemned the attack as a “dangerous escalation” and a “flagrant violation of sovereignty,” warning it threatened national security and regional stability. It added that Qatar reserves the right to respond under international law.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were on alert after Israel struck an Iranian natural gas processing facility. Israel attacked Iran’s South Pars gas field on Wednesday, prompting retaliatory missile attacks.

Qatar had already suspended LNG production on March 2 following Iranian drone attacks on Ras Laffan and Mesaieed Industrial City. The country is the world’s second-largest LNG exporter after the U.S., accounting for nearly a fifth of global shipments, according to Kpler.

The escalating strikes on Middle East energy infrastructure risk deepening the supply shock triggered by the Iran war. Tanker movement through the Strait of Hormuz that was handling about 20% of global oil supplies, is largely blocked.

Randhir Jaiswal, India’s external ministry of affairs, told CNBC on the phone the country was in ongoing discussions with Iran to get 22 ships through the Strait. Two ships have already reached India via the passageway, Jaiswal said.

India continues to increase energy purchases from Russia, Jaiswal said.

Gulf Oil’s senior energy advisor Tom Kloza warned that markets could enter an “all bets are off” scenario if the conflict spills beyond the Gulf and begins targeting energy infrastructure in other regions, such as Europe or the United States.

“Can you imagine the response in the world if [Iran] targeted something outside of the Persian Gulf, a refinery in Rotterdam or a facility somewhere in the United States, that’s when all bets are off and prices could go absolutely apocalyptic,” he said.

Such a shift would mark a break from contained geopolitical risk to a global supply shock, where traditional pricing models and risk assumptions no longer hold. In that environment, fears of widespread disruptions to refining and fuel distribution could trigger extreme volatility, with oil and gas prices surging sharply as traders price in worst-case scenarios and scramble to secure supplies.

“We’re moving from a supply chain problem to potentially a supply problem. There’s a big difference. You fix supply chain problems quickly,” said Dan Pickering, founder and CIO of Pickering Energy Partners.

“If you start changing the ability to produce, whether it’s LNG or oil, and all of a sudden you can’t move the same amount of volumes because the volumes aren’t there,” he said. “This is an escalation.”

Source: CNBC

--Agencies

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