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Oil rises as US, Iran trade strikes, Israel moves further into Lebanon

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Oil prices rose more than ​3% on Monday
Oil prices rose more than ​3% on Monday after Iran and the United States (US) traded strikes and Israel ordered troops to move further into Lebanon in ‌its battle with Tehran-backed Hezbollah.
US crude futures rose $2.88 or 3.3% to $90.24 a barrel. Brent futures rose $2.78 or 3.05% to $93.9 a barrel.
The fighting, after Washington hosted Israel-Lebanon peace talks on Friday, dimmed hopes that the US and Iran could soon announce an extension to their ​ceasefire, which had driven Brent and West Texas Intermediate to settle down 1.8% and 1.7%, respectively, on Friday.
The US said on ​Sunday it conducted “self-defence strikes” on radar and drone control sites in Iran’s Goruk and Qeshm Island ⁠over the weekend in what it said was a response to “aggressive” actions by Tehran.
Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said ​on Monday its aerospace force targeted an air base used in what it called a US attack on a telecoms tower ​on Sirik Island.
US President Donald Trump said on Friday he would soon decide on a proposed deal to extend a ceasefire announced in early April, giving negotiators more time to seek a permanent end to the war and find a solution to the underlying dispute over Iran’s nuclear programme.
–Reuters–