* Venezuela crisis, Iran drive oil price surge
* Asian, European stocks mostly firmer, with London shut
* Dollar powers back towards fresh 4-month highs
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2018 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
By Dhara Ranasinghe and Tommy Wilkes
LONDON, May 7 (Reuters) - Oil prices jumped to their highest since late 2014 on Monday on a deepening economic crisis in Venezuela and worries that the Unites States could re-impose sanctions on Iran, while stocks firmed and the dollar rose towards its 2018 peak.
With trade thinned by a holiday closure in London, European shares opened higher .STOXX , boosted by energy stocks as well as encouraging earnings updates.
Heavyweight Nestle NESN.S also gained after the Swiss-based food firm agreed a tie-up with Starbucks SBUX.O . Asian markets also rose after Friday's tame reading on U.S. wage growth lessened chances of a pick-up in the pace of interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve. Gains were capped by Sino-U.S. trade tensions.
U.S. equity futures ESc1 1YMc1 pointed to a positive open for Wall Street.
The day's eye-catching moves came in energy markets.
U.S. crude oil prices rose 70 cents, or 1 percent, pushing above $70 a barrel CLc1 for the first time since November 2014 as the crisis in OPEC member state Venezuela threatened to further crimp its production and exports. crude oil futures LCOc1 were at $75.55 per barrel at 0945 GMT, up 0.9 percent and having also touched their highest since November 2014.
Also driving oil prices higher was the May 12 deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump for Europeans to "fix" the deal with Iran over its nuclear program. If they do not, Trump has said he would refuse to extend U.S. sanctions relief for the oil-producing Islamic Republic. European oil and gas share index .SXEP was up 0.4 percent.
"All in all it's a positive environment for the equity markets," said Niels Christensen, chief analyst at Nordea in Copenhagen.
DOLLAR RALLY INTACT
The dollar strengthened back towards the 2018 peak it reached on Friday, when investors shrugged off the weaker-than-expected jobs report to extend the currency's 2-1/2 week-long rally.
The dollar, which has enjoyed a sudden reversal in fortunes as investors bet on more Fed rate hikes and a slower pace of tightening in the euro zone, rose 0.3 percent versus the euro to $1.1928 EUR= .
Measured against a basket of currencies, the dollar index was 0.3 percent stronger at 92.811 .DXY , not far from the 92.9 it hit on Friday - its highest since December. data from the euro zone's largest economy Germany, industrial orders unexpectedly dropped for the third month running in March, suggesting factories there are shifting into lower gear. week ahead includes readings on the health of the Chinese economy and, U.S. inflation ,and a Bank of England monetary policy meeting.
"Looking at the U.S. economic data, everything is looking quite positive. No one expects higher interest rates to be a brake on economic growth," said Christensen.
The soft German data supported euro zone government bond markets DE10YT=RR as investors continued to bet on caution from the European Central Bank. lot has been repriced in terms of the ECB so the outlook for bonds is a bit more mixed," said Commerzbank (DE:CBKG) rates strategist Rainer Guntermann.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ U.S. vs Venezuela oil production since 2005
https://reut.rs/2JY8i77
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>