Oil costs surged round 25 % on Monday to their highest since mid-2022, with Brent on monitor for a document one-day achieve, whereas gold fell 2pc as an escalating Iran conflict squeezed world vitality provides, boosted the greenback and dampened hopes of interest-rate cuts.
Agriculture markets, led by edible oils, rose as they took their cue from oil costs as a result of in depth use of vegetable oils in making biofuels. Aluminum firmed on provide worries whilst different metals confronted headwinds from a stronger greenback.
“The violent response stems from the markets seeing no apparent offense within the escalating Center East battle, now a high-stakes standoff the place neither aspect seems prepared to blink first,” Tony Sycamore, IG market analyst, mentioned in a be aware.
“The chance of extra lasting financial injury continues to construct by the day.”
Iran on Monday named Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father, Ali Khamenei as Supreme Chief.
Soaring oil lifts vegetables, grains
Brent was on track for its biggest one-day gain ever in both percentage and absolute terms as the expanding US-Israeli war with Iran led some major Middle Eastern oil producers to cut supplies, and on fears of prolonged disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint.
Brent crude futures climbed to a high of $119.50 per barrel, and US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) to $119.48 a barrel.
“…the situation appears to be deteriorating further,” ING analysts said in a note. “In addition, upstream oil production has started to shut in, with producers facing storage constraints. Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE began reducing oil production.”
In agricultural markets, Malaysian palm oil rose 9pc, and Chicago soybean oil climbed to its highest since late 2022, buoyed by the crude oil rally. Wheat rose to its highest since June 2024, and corn prices hit a 10-month high.
Gold fell more than 2pc as a stronger dollar weighed on greenback-priced bullion, while higher energy costs fueled inflation concerns and further dimmed the prospects for near-term reductions in interest rates.
The dollar hovered near a three-month high hit last week, making bullion more expensive for holders of other currencies.
Oil-driven inflation fears and delayed rate-cut expectations likely strengthened US yields and the dollar, outweighing safe-haven demand and pushing gold down.
Aluminum jumps on supply disruptions
Aluminum soared to its highest in four years as supply concerns due to the Middle East war intensified.
Benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange hit its highest since March 2022 at $3,544 per ton.
Qatari smelter Qatalum and Aluminum Bahrain have already declared force majeure on shipments amid rising tensions in the Middle East.
Other base metals were weighed down by a firmer dollar.

