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A look at past oil shocks, Israel's war and Iran as wild card

Oil prices are expected to remain volatile as Israel mounts assaults in Gaza after surprise attacks by Hamas killed 1,300 Israelis. Now Iran is throwing its weight into the fight.

Global investors are keeping a close eye on commodity and stock prices after the surprise attacks by Hamas on Israel a week ago that killed 1,300 Israelis, most of them civilians, and took dozens of hostages back to Gaza. The Gaza Health Ministry said more than 2,300 Palestinians have been killed since the fighting erupted, and on Sunday, an Israeli ground assault on Gaza was looming.

ISRAEL'S WAR: LIVE UPDATES

After bouncing between losses and gains during the week, oil rose more than 5%  to the $87.69 per-barrel level, with the bulk of those gains coming on Friday, as tracked by Dow Jones Market Data Group.

IRAN WARNS ISRAEL AS WAR RAGES

"When we first had the invasion, oil prices rose sharply higher, everybody got long, and then a few hours later everybody said wait a minute, Israel doesn't produce any oil, supplies are not at risk, so everybody that was trying to jump into the market to take advantage of that got crushed when prices fell," said Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group and a FOX Business contributor.

"But this is a new game, a new phase," he added, with the wild card being Iran and its meeting with Hamas last week that pushed prices higher on Friday. Iran is also the biggest financial backer of Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group. 

Iran’s foreign minister has warned that an Israeli ground offensive in Gaza would force Iran to intervene, likely expanding the war to other parts of the Middle East, according to a report.

Hossein Amir-Abdollahian made the comment during a meeting with the United Nations' envoy to the Middle East, Tor Wennesland, on Saturday in Beirut, Axios reported, citing two diplomatic sources with knowledge of the situation.

Saudi Arabia is the largest OPEC producer, according to the EIA, while Iran is fifth.

But crude's climb, so far, has not matched other conflicts, according to some strategists.

INFLATION RISES MORE THAN EXPECTED IN SEPTEMBER AS HIGH PRICES PERSIST

Michael Hartnett, investment strategist at Bank of America, noted that the move in oil has been much less muted than other global conflicts.

"Other shocks saw oil jump 40% to 90% in short order. Oil barely moved [last] week; maybe geopolitics don’t spiral or maybe oil is sending [a] recession signal" he wrote in a research note with accompanying charts.

He outlined the "Tale of the Tape: 5 'oil shocks' of past 50 years," which included the Yom Kippur War in 1973 that saw oil go up about 300% in four months; the Iraq War in November 2002 that saw a 50% jump in about three weeks; and the Ukraine War, which began in February 2022 and saw a nearly 40% jump in less than a month.

Still, the world markets will continue to monitor the situation in the coming days.

Last week, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned about all the geopolitical unrest in the world today.

"This may be the most dangerous time the world has seen in decades," he said.

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Fox News' Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.

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