By Florence Tan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil prices rose a further 2% on Monday, pushing Brent above $70 a barrel, as rhetoric from the United States, Iran and Iraq fanned tensions in the Middle East after the killing of a top Iranian general.
Brent crude futures (LCOc1) soared to a high of $70.74 a barrel and was at $70.25 at 0551 GMT, up $1.65, or 2.4%, from Friday's settlement.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (CLc1) crude was at $64.35 a barrel, up $1.30, or 2.1%, after touching $64.72 earlier, the highest since April.
The gains extended Friday's more-than-3% surge after a U.S. air strike in Iraq killed Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani on Friday, heightening concerns that a widening Middle East conflict that could disrupt oil supplies.
The region accounts for nearly half of the world's oil production, while a fifth of the world's oil shipments pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
On Sunday President Trump threatened to impose sanctions on Iraq, the second largest producer among the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), if U.S. troops were forced to withdraw from the country. Baghdad earlier called on American and other foreign troops to leave Iraq.
Trump also said that the United States will retaliate against Iran if Tehran were to strike back after the killing.
"The big uncertainty now for markets is how Iran will respond to this attack," ING analysts said in a note.
"While clearly, the latest developments put U.S. assets in the region at risk, it also increases the risk of disruptions to oil supply in the Middle East, be it through the Iranians disrupting Strait of Hormuz oil flows, or through attacking energy infrastructure of U.S. allies in the region."
However, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) analysts said the current risk premium embedded in Brent monthly price spreads is already elevated and an actual supply disruption is now necessary to sustain current oil prices.
"The precedent set by the Abqaiq attack showed that the oil market has significant supply flexibility starting when Brent is at $70/bbl, even before shale production needs to ramp up, suggesting only moderate upside from here, should an attack on oil assets actually occur," the bank said, referring to an attack on a Saudi processing complex in September.
In the United States, U.S. crude stocks fell by their most since June as exports exceeded 4 million barrels per day for the first time in history, the Energy Information Administration said on Friday.
Elsewhere, bad weather shut all four east Libyan oil export terminals on Sunday and the closure could last three days, port sources said.