UAE quits Opec group of oil producers; UK government borrowing costs nearing highest since 2008 – business live | Business

Introduction: BP profits double as Iran war drives up energy prices

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

The Iran war has helped BP to double its profits in the first quarter of this year, its latest financial results show.

The oil major has just reported that it made a profit of nearly $3.2bn in the first three months of 2026, on its favoured ‘underlying replacement cost’ earnings measure.

That’s higher than City analysts had predicted, with BP – which was hit by a shareholder rebellion last week – giving some of the credit to an “exceptional” contribution from its oil trading operations.

These quarterly profits are up from $1.54bn in the fourth quarter of 2025, and $1.38bn in the first quarter of last year.

Q1 2026 includes the surge in oil and gas prices in March, after the war began at the end of February, disrupting energy supplies from the region.

BP’s new CEO, Meg O’Neill, acknowledges the impact of the Middlle East conflict, saying the company is working in an “environment of conflict and complexity”.

O’Neill says BP is “working with customers and governments to get fuel where it’s needed” – at a time when fears of jet fuel shortages are growing.

She adds:

double quotation markOverall, our business continues to run well. This was another quarter of strong operational and financial delivery, and we made further progress towards our 2027 targets. We had high plant reliability, high refining availability and increased production in the Gulf of America and at bpx Energy, our US onshore business – keeping production levels steady despite the ongoing disruption.

The surge in energy prices is worrying central banks, many of whom are setting interest rates this week.

Overnight, the Bank of Japan left borrowing costs unchanged, but three policymakers did break ranks and vote for a hike….

The agenda

  • 9am BST: ECB survey of Consumer Inflation Expectations in the eurozone (timing corrected)

  • 2pm BST: US house price data: S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price MoM

  • 3pm BST: US consumer confidence data

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Key events

Snap analysis: a blow to Opec, but a boost to Trump?

The UAE’s decision to quit Opec is a blow to the group, but could potentially please the White House.

Under normal times, Opec’s production quotas restrict how much oil a member state can sell on the markets. Once the UAE has left, it will be free to pump more – which could push down prices.

Of course, that’s not a factor until the strait of Hormuz is reopened.

But it could put downward pressure on prices in the long term. Back in 2018, President Donald Trump on Friday accused Opec of keeping oil prices artificially high, by restraining how much oil was being released onto the markets.

Opec hasn’t always managed to stay united. In March 2020 they failed to agree production cuts when the Covid-19 pandemic hit the world economy, before agreeing a deal the next month.

Opec currently includes 12 members, including Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The current Middle East conflict has created tensions within the group.

In March, Iran launched a successful drone attack on the UAE’s Shah gas field, and also attacked the United Arab Emirates port of Fujairah – which lies just outside the strait of Hormuz, while its other ​export hubs are located within the Gulf.

Tensions have also been growing between the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which is the dominant player within Opec. The two countries have been supporting different groups in Yemen – culminating in Saudi Arabia bombing what it said was a shipment of weapons for Yemeni separatists that had arrived from the UAE in December.

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