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Canada PM calls for 'rapid de-escalation' of war in Middle East
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New Zealand's All Blacks name Dave Rennie as coach
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Trump says US Navy could escort tankers, Iran aimed to strike first
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Strasbourg spot on against Reims in French Cup
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Slot frustrated after Liverpool suffer late heartbreak again in Wolves stunner
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Iran hits US targets in Gulf as Tehran targeted
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Will US oil companies be the big winners from the Iran war?
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Liverpool rocked by last-gasp defeat at Wolves
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Israel says hit Iran nuclear site: Latest developments in Middle East war
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Aaron Judge and US stars eye Japan revenge in World Baseball Classic
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Ronaldo injured but should be fit for World Cup
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France deploys aircraft carrier to Mediterranean over Iran war
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Judge rules Trump cannot halt New York traffic congestion pricing
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Trump threatens Spain ties over Iran war refusal
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England hit Ukraine for six in Women's World Cup qualifiers
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Merz seeks early end to Iran war in Trump meeting
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US says Israel killed Iran's leader
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'Not Churchill': Trump ups criticism of Starmer over Iran strikes
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Brazil's economy slows as high interest rates curb growth
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Trump denounces UK, Spain over Iran stance
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Trump says 'everything's been knocked out' in Iran
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Polish doctors jailed for denying woman abortion
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Tehran resembles ghost town as bombs rain down
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US-Israeli strikes pummel Tehran, as Trump says 'too late' for talks
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US Homeland Security chief grilled over immigration crackdown
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Arteta fires back at critics of Arsenal's set-piece success
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2017 implosion of Argentine submarine was 'foreseeable,' trial hears
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Germany's Merz meets Trump for talks eclipsed by Iran war
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Real Madrid's Rudiger tried to 'smash my face in': Getafe's Rico
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England rip up team sheet for Italy Six Nations clash
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Real Madrid's Brazilian winger Rodrygo set to miss World Cup with knee injury
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Man Utd 'hungry for more', says Carrick
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Flights to evacuate stranded travellers in Middle East
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England make sweeping changes for Italy Six Nations clash
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Mideast war threatens to spark world energy crisis
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Tens of thousands of Afghans displaced by Pakistan conflict
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Unbeaten South Africa face 'fresh start' in semi-final: Markram
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Iran steps up attacks on Mideast economy in response to US-Israeli strikes
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'We back ourselves': Underdogs New Zealand eye T20 World Cup final
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UK cuts 2026 growth forecast, flags Iran war risk
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Guardiola says Premier League teams must adapt to set-piece threat
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Will Iran take part in the 2026 World Cup?
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Afghans escape from Iranian cities to get home
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'Peaky Blinders' stars hit Brum red carpet for movie premiere
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Brazil's Flamengo sack coach Filipe Luis despite 8-0 win
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England 'not fearing anything' against India, says Curran
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Global markets turmoil intensifies on Iran war
Will US oil companies be the big winners from the Iran war?
Energy prices have surged dramatically since the United States and Israel launched their attack on Iran Saturday, and that will almost certainly translate into bigger profits.
But the question remains whether the new war in the Middle East also leads to increased oilfield investment.
- What does the Middle East war mean for US oil industry profits? -
Geopolitical crises lift oil industry profits if a supply disruption causes commodity prices to spike. That's what happened after Russia invaded Ukraine.
In the third quarter of 2022, ExxonMobil and Chevron reported more than $30 billion in profits between the two companies. The results were boosted by a surge in crude and natural gas prices.
Brent oil futures briefly surged above $85 a barrel Tuesday, while European natural gas prices reached their highest level in 2023.
These increases show the market's response to the effective shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway accounting for some 20 percent of global crude supplies. The jump in the natural gas market is due to QatarEnergy's suspension of liquefied natural gas (LNG) production.
"Certainly, the producers get a benefit when prices go up like this," said Again Capital's John Kilduff. "This will definitely help their bottom lines."
The question is whether commodity prices will stay high.
- Will US companies invest to produce more oil and natural gas? -
Energy industry analysts don't expect companies to drill more wells or increase capital budgets unless they conclude the outages will be lengthy. Investments in projects that don't come online for months or years requires confidence prices will stay high.
"What US companies would need to see would be a sustained higher price," said Dan Pickering of Pickering Energy partners in Houston, who thinks oil prices could reach $100 a barrel if the Strait of Hormuz stays empty for a meaningful duration.
But such a lengthy outage is far from a sure thing.
President Donald Trump -- closely attuned to the political implications of gasoline prices ahead of mid-term elections -- said Tuesday that the US navy would escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz if needed, and ordered Washington to provide insurance for shipping.
The announcement prompted a modest pullback in oil prices, which finished below session highs.
Oil prices could retreat further if the United States, China and other countries tap emergency stockpiles, said Ken Medlock, a fellow at the Baker Institute for Public Policy at Rice University in Houston.
Futures markets currently show oil prices retreating gradually in the second half of 2026, implying "the market is seeing it as a short-term" disruption, Medlock said.
- How much could US energy supply grow and where would investments go? -
While the US energy industry is poised to benefit from Middle East oil and gas outages, the United States "cannot simply 'flip a switch' to replace large, sudden Middle Eastern outages," said Brian Kessens, portfolio manager at Tortoise Capital.
Some elements of the petroleum industry have already benefited from the upheaval. Kessens said refined products dislocated by the Hormuz outage has boosted profit margins for Gulf Coast refiners.
Other short-term winners include LNG exporters who have capacity not committed in contracts.
Despite this, "meaningful incremental supply typically requires months to years," Kessens said.
Among the potential upstream oil and gas candidates, analysts said the most likely pick for incremental additional investment would be shale properties such as the Permian Basin in the US, where oil companies are already active and which have a shorter payback compared with other prospects.
"The focus would be on short-cycle, quick results activity. US shale, maybe a little bit of Venezuela," Pickering said. "Then it would move to longer-term projects like exploration and offshore."
A.AlHaj--SF-PST