As the US renews strikes on
Iran and announces a
maritime blockade, oil has risen to its highest price since June’s peace deal, increasing the chance of another RBA
interest rate rise. Photograph: AAP View image in fullscreen As the US renews strikes on
Iran and announces a
maritime blockade, oil has risen to its highest price since June’s peace deal, increasing the chance of another RBA
interest rate rise. Photograph: AAP Fourth Australian
interest rate rise more likely if Trump’s
Iran conflict not resolved within a week Economists warn continued airstrikes could push
oil prices beyond US$100 a barrel, increasing chance of further RBA rate hike Resurgent oil and fuel prices could cement a fourth
interest rate rise this year if
Donald Trump’s renewed conflict with
Iran is not resolved within a week, economists warn. US missile strikes on
Iran and Trump’s announcement overnight of a new
maritime blockade has lifted
oil prices to their highest point in the month since the two countries agreed to a peace deal.
Brent crude oil hit US$85 a barrel on Tuesday morning, while the
West Texas Intermediate benchmark price for US crude surpassed US$80 a barrel. Both had been trading near US$70 in early July. Vivek Dhar, an energy commodities strategist at
Commonwealth Bank, said escalating hostilities could run down oil stockpiles and push prices far above their April high. “The clock has started ticking again on global oil inventory depletion,” Dhar said in a note on Tuesday. Continued conflict would push Brent
oil prices to US$100 a barrel within 10 days and US$150 a barrel within 10 weeks, he said. Crude prices at US$110 a barrel in April sent Australian unleaded petrol prices to nearly 260 cents a litre and diesel to nearly 320 cents a litre. Rising
oil prices in July had already pushed up wholesale diesel prices from 177.1 cents a litre early in the month to 186 cents a litre on Tuesday, according to the
Australian Institute of Petroleum. Diesel prices at service stations have risen accordingly, back to about 190 cents a litre in the big capital cities, according to MotorMouth. Peter Khoury, an
NRMA spokesperson, said markets had accounted for breakdowns in negotiations but fuel would start to get more expensive if
oil prices remained elevated for more than a week. The federal government’s fuel excise relief is set to expire on 2 August, which will push prices up by 16 cents a litre. Matthew Hassan, the head of Westpac’s macro-forecasting, said resurgent
oil prices supported the bank’s prediction that the Reserve Bank will raise interest rates in August. “It will feed into their unease that this inflation will be persistent,” he said. Markets have increased bets on an RBA rate hike since airstrikes resumed on Thursday, now betting on a 23% chance of a hike in August and more than a 50% chance by December. The RBA has already increased rates three times in 2026, to 4.35%. Renewed hostilities have damaged households’ confidence in the economy, according the Westpac-Melbourne Institute tracker of consumer confidence, published on Tuesday. “In the absence of that [conflict], we probably would have seen a more substantive recovery for the month,” Hassan said. The survey found consumers had been growing less afraid of an
interest rate rise and more hopeful their family finances would improve in a year’s time, before the conflict heated up. Most were still pessimistic on average and expected a further rate increase in the coming year. My Bui, an AMP economist, said higher
oil prices and the growing likelihood of a rate rise would drag consumer confidence back toward its April lows. “The employment market hasn’t yet deteriorated to concerning levels, and price pressures are still around,” Bui said. “So we continue to see higher chance of a hike from the RBA in the August meeting.” Explore more on these topics Interest rates Petrol prices Oil Commodities Australian economy news Share Reuse this content