Oil prices ticked higher in early trade on Thursday as investors weighed the impacts of the escalating conflict in the Middle East, against an amply-supplied global market.
Israel has launched a ground operation across its northern border into Lebanon targeting the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, opening a new and dangerous phase in almost a year of war.
Iran was drawn into the conflict after it fired more than 180 ballistic missiles at Israel in an escalation of hostilities, which have seeped out of Israel and Palestine into Lebanon and further east.
But an unexpected build in US crude partly offset supply disruption concerns. The EIA showed that rose by 3.9 million barrels last week, compared with analysts' expectations for a drop of 1.3 million barrels.
OPEC has enough spare oil capacity to compensate for a full loss of Iranian supply if Israel knocks out that country's facilities. Oil slumps 17% in the previous quarter as economic data portend weak demand. China's factory activity shrank for a fifth straight month and the services sector slowed sharply in September, suggesting Beijing could grapple with its 2024 growth target even with stimulus blitz.
Brent crude's gains were capped by 50 SMA. If the price fails to break above the level, we maintain a bearish bias.
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