OREANDA-NEWS.   Brent crude jumped more than USD 2 to over USD 112 a barrel on worries that escalating violence in Iraq could disrupt oil supplies from the major OPEC exporter.

The Brent futures contract - an international benchmark sensitive to geopolitical turmoil - climbed USD 2.24 to USD 112.19 a barrel by 1013 GMT, its highest since early March. U.S. oil gained USD 1.83 to USD 106.23 a barrel.

An initially muted market response to news that Sunni rebels had overrun Iraq's second-largest city and moved in on its largest refinery at Baiji has given way to growing alarm as the al Qaeda splinter group appeared to make rapid advances toward the Shi'ite-led government in Baghdad.

"I would entirely ascribe this move to the insurrection in the north of Iraq ... The fear is that it will cause a threat to Iraqi oil exports," Christopher Bellew, a trader at Jefferies Bache, said.

"If this conflict knocked out Iraq as an exporter, that would have significant impact on prices ... How high could they go It depends on what happens."

Concern that the Baghdad-controlled Iraqi army was disintegrating and could no longer secure key oil facilities was exacerbated when soldiers fled the major northern oil city of Kirkuk, leaving it in the hands of the Kurdish Peshmerga forces.

However, Iraq's main oil export facilities are in the largely Shi'ite areas in the south of the country, where al Qaeda-inspired groups enjoy little sympathy.

Those facilities, which ship about 2.6 million barrels per day (bpd), were "very, very safe", the country's Oil Minister Abdul Kareem Luaibi said.

His comments came after Sunni insurgents overran Tikrit, threatening the Baiji refinery, which can process 300,000 bpd and supplies Baghdad.

Iraq's biggest oil refinery at Baiji remained under government control on Thursday after Sunni rebels' offensive through northern Iraq, the oil minister said.

Oil prices are likely to range around current levels, said Jonathan Barratt, chief executive of Sydney-based commodity research firm Barratt Bulletin, adding that it would take further signs of disruption to push values higher.

U.S. OIL STOCKS
Oil prices also drew support from last week's 2.6-million-bpd drop in crude inventories, Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at Sydney's CMC Markets, said. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a 1.9-million-barrel decline.

U.S. crude is expected to hold around USD 105 per barrel, Spooner forecast.

"In the short term I expect a widening of the WTI-Brent spread reflecting what happens in Iraq," he said.

The keenly traded spread of Brent over WTI was below USD 6 at 0937 GMT, with U.S. crude also facing upward pressure.

Investors were also watching for the release of key economic data from the United States later on Thursday and figures from China on Friday for industrial production and retail sales.