Oil Soars 10% to $78.52 on Iran Tensions, $120+ Barrel Risk Looms

Brent crude oil prices have jumped approximately 10% to $78.52 per barrel following escalating military tensions between Iran and the United States. Banking expert Ajay Bagga warns that the situation has shifted to overt kinetic signalling, with the critical risk being disruption to energy logistics through the Strait of Hormuz. He outlines scenarios where oil could spike to $120-140 per barrel or higher if maritime transit is affected. For import-dependent India, such price surges would directly widen the current account deficit and increase consumer inflation, pressuring specific sectors like aviation and chemicals.

Key Points: Oil Prices Surge 10% Amid Middle East Tensions, Risk $120+

  • Brent crude surges ~10% to $78.52/barrel
  • Strait of Hormuz handles 20-22M barrels/day, a key chokepoint
  • Expert warns oil could hit $120-140+ if maritime routes disrupted
  • For India, each $10 oil rise widens deficit by ~0.5% of GDP
  • Pressure on aviation, chemicals; beneficiaries include upstream oil & defence
2 min read

Crude oil prices surge approx 10% to USD 78.52/barrel amid middle east tensions, Experts warn of USD 120+ oil risk

Brent crude hits $78.52 as Iran-US tensions escalate. Expert warns of $120+ oil, impacting India's deficit and inflation. Key chokepoint at risk.

Crude oil prices surge approx 10% to USD 78.52/barrel amid middle east tensions, Experts warn of USD 120+ oil risk
"The most critical variable is not tactical military superiority. It is energy logistics. - Ajay Bagga"

By Nikhil Dedha, New Delhi, March 2

Brent crude prices have surged around 10 per cent amid escalating tensions in the Middle East following ongoing military confrontation between Iran and the United States after the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Brent crude rose to as high as USD 78.52 per barrel, marking a sharp rise in prices as markets reacted to rising geopolitical risks in the region.

Ajay Bagga, Banking and Market Expert, told ANI that the confrontation between Iran and Israel has shifted from deniable operations to overt kinetic signalling, a transition that carries global implications.

"The most critical variable is not tactical military superiority. It is energy logistics," Bagga said.

He noted that roughly 20-22 million barrels per day, about one-fifth of global oil consumption, transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Even temporary disruptions in this key chokepoint elevate insurance premiums, freight costs, and crude benchmarks.

According to him, markets are already witnessing sharp increases in war-risk insurance premiums, tanker rerouting and naval escort activity, and higher embedded logistics costs.

Outlining possible oil pricing scenarios, Bagga said that in the case of limited escalation, Brent could rise to USD 100-115 per barrel. In the event of maritime disruption, prices may move to USD 120-140, while sustained closure risk could push oil to USD 150 or higher.

On the role of OPEC, he said Saudi Arabia and the UAE hold approximately 4-5 million barrels per day of spare capacity. However, most of that supply still relies on Hormuz transit.

"Spare capacity is helpful but not frictionless," he said.

For oil-importing economies like India, Bagga said the transmission mechanism is direct. Every USD 10 increase in oil widens the current account deficit by roughly 0.4-0.5 per cent of GDP and raises CPI by 30-40 basis points.

"This is not simply a geopolitical story. It is a macroeconomic story," he said.

He added that India-specific sectors likely to face pressure include aviation, chemicals, autos, paints and oil marketing companies if price hikes are not fully passed through. Relative beneficiaries could include upstream oil companies, defence, IT due to USD hedge, and gold-linked plays.

"Geopolitical risk is no longer episodic. It is structural. 2026 marks the return of hard geopolitics," Bagga said, advising investors to stress-test portfolios for USD 120 oil, diversify geography, own real assets and hedge currencies.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Expert Ajay Bagga's analysis is spot on. The Strait of Hormuz is the world's jugular vein for oil. Even a small disruption there sends shockwaves globally. India's CAD and inflation are directly linked to this. Tough times ahead for the economy.
A
Aman W
While the geopolitical risk is real, I feel our media and some experts sometimes amplify the fear. Yes, prices will rise, but India has navigated such crises before. We have stronger forex reserves now. Let's not panic, but plan.
S
Sarah B
Living in India for 5 years now. The impact of global oil prices is felt so immediately here compared to back home. My commute cost and grocery bill are the first to react. Hope for a peaceful resolution soon, for everyone's sake.
V
Vikram M
Bagga sir's point about this being a "macroeconomic story" for India is crucial. It's not just about petrol pumps. It affects the rupee, interest rates, job creation... the whole nine yards. Time for some tough fiscal decisions.
K
Kavya N
As someone working in the paints industry, this news gives me anxiety. Our raw material costs are directly linked to crude. If prices hit $120, many small manufacturers might not survive. The ripple effect on jobs will be severe.

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