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Oil prices just jumped hard on geopolitical tension - WTI crude hit $65.18, up nearly 3.12% in a single session. What's driving this? Investors are watching multiple pressure points simultaneously right now.
First, there's the Russia-Ukraine situation heating up again. High-level officials from both sides kicked off fresh negotiations in Abu Dhabi to discuss a potential peace framework. The first round of talks last month didn't move the needle much, but now Russia is pushing harder on territorial demands, which is keeping uncertainty elevated. That kind of standoff always ripples through energy markets because it affects supply confidence.
Meanwhile, U.S.-Iran nuclear talks are happening in Oman - Iran specifically rejected Turkey as a negotiation site and pushed for direct U.S. engagement without intermediaries. The Trump administration agreed to that. Separately, there was a military incident where a Shahed-139 drone got shot down near the USS Abraham Lincoln, and then Iranian forces attempted to seize a tanker in the Strait of Hormuz before things de-escalated. These kinds of escalations, even when they don't fully materialize, keep traders on edge about potential supply disruptions.
On the data side, the EIA reported U.S. crude inventories fell by 3.455 million barrels for the week. Cushing stockpiles dropped 743k barrels. Gasoline inventories actually rose 685k barrels, but distillates took a bigger hit with a 5.6 million barrel draw. That inventory tightness combined with geopolitical uncertainty creates the perfect setup for price support.
The dollar also strengthened after Trump signed the budget package, which added some tailwind to dollar-denominated commodities like oil. So you've got supply concerns, geopolitical risk premium, and technical factors all aligning to push crude higher. This is the kind of environment where energy traders stay glued to their screens.