Oil prices edge higher after strikes on Israel test ceasefire
Oil prices rose in Asian trading on Monday after Iran launched missile strikes against Israel, marking the first such attacks since an April ceasefire. The global Brent benchmark increased by 2.6% to $95.50 a barrel, and US crude rose 2.5% to $92.75.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedOil prices rose in Asian trading on Monday after Iran launched missile strikes against Israel, marking the first such attacks since an April ceasefire. The global Brent benchmark increased by 2.6% to $95.50 a barrel, and US crude rose 2.5% to $92.75. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps stated these strikes are the beginning of a week-long series of attacks. Despite Israel's military indicating readiness to retaliate, former US President Donald Trump reportedly plans to urge Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to retaliate, citing proximity to a deal with Iran. The article notes that the April ceasefire has been repeatedly violated by both nations, and oil prices have seen significant fluctuations since earlier strikes in February.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedUS President Donald Trump told Axios he will urge Israel 'not to retaliate'.
The price of the global benchmark Brent jumped by 2.6% to $95.50 a barrel.
Iran's IRGC warned that the attacks are the start of 'a full week' of strikes.
Oil prices climbed on Monday morning trade in Asia after Iran fired missiles at Israel.
A ceasefire agreement has been in force since 17 April and has been violated repeatedly by both Israel and Iran.