Oil prices spiked more than 7% on Friday as a sharp escalation between Israel and Iran unnerved global energy markets. With fears mounting over potential supply disruptions, both Brent and US crude benchmarks climbed to levels not seen since January.By mid-morning in London, Brent crude was up $5.10, or 7.4%, at $74.46 a barrel, after earlier touching $78.50. US West Texas Intermediate rose to $73.15, also gaining $5.10, or 7.5%, after hitting a peak of $77.62, reported Reuters.These gains marked the steepest single-day jumps for both contracts since early 2022, when Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine triggered global price shocks.Israel launched what it described as an extensive military operation against Iranian nuclear and missile infrastructure, stating the aim was to halt Tehranโs nuclear ambitions. Iran confirmed damage at its Natanz nuclear facility but said no radioactive contamination had occurred.The oil marketโs immediate concern is the Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime passage for around 20% of the worldโs oil supply. While no disruptions have been reported, analysts say the risk of escalation makes the situation volatile.โThe potential for spill over is real, but so far flows remain intact,โ said Ole Hvalbye of SEB. โThe market is watching closely.โJPMorgan warned in a note that if the strait were to be blocked or oil infrastructure in the region were targeted, prices could skyrocket to as high as $130 a barrelโnearly double current forecasts.Barclays noted that despite the price surge, the market hasnโt yet priced in any actual drop in Iranian output. Most of Iranโs crude exports head to China, putting those volumes at particular risk if tensions escalate further. OPEC+โs spare production capacity could help cushion any supply shortfall, said Janiv Shah of Rystad Energy.US Secretary of State Marco Rubio distanced Washington from Israelโs actions, calling the strikes unilateral and urging Iran not to retaliate against American interests in the region.Broader financial markets reflected investor anxiety. Stocks retreated, while safe haven assets such as gold and the Swiss franc saw inflows.โThe big unknown is whether Iran limits its response to Israel or widens the conflict,โ said Helima Croft of RBC Capital Markets. โTargeting military or economic assets beyond Israel could deepen the regional fallout.โWhile crude markets remain elevated heading into the weekend, analysts are divided on how long the rally will last, with much hinging on whether the conflict expands or remains contained.