Spectre of renewed U.S. strikes on Iran drives wild oil price swings

News Room
By News Room 5 Min Read

CALGARY – A closely watched global crude benchmark briefly touched its highest price since war erupted in the Middle East more than two months ago before retreating on Thursday, as a resolution to the supply squeeze in the Strait of Hormuz remains elusive. 

Brent — the price benchmark tied to light, sweet, seaborne crude — for June delivery spiked above US$126 per barrel and then swiftly pulled back toward US$114. That monthly contract is only seeing light trading, with those for July delivery and onward showing a much higher trading volume and less volatility. 

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