Oil prices hold steady as U.S. decision on Iran sanctions looms

Reuters  |  BEIJING/SINGAPORE 

BEIJING/(Reuters) - Oil prices held steady on Friday after shedding earlier gains, as market jitters kicked in over the prospect of geopolitical risks from possible new U.S.

Brent futures were at $73.59 per barrel, down 3 cents, or 0.04 percent, from their last close after touching a intraday high of $73.80 per barrel in early morning trading.

Technical analysis from Reuters' showed the market may retest a price support level at $72.39 per barrel after peaking around a resistance at $75.45.

Friday morning's fluctuations came as investors sifted through the upcoming sanction decision and an increasing U.S. crude inventory build for clues.

Iran's said on Thursday U.S. demands to change its 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers were unacceptable, as a deadline set by for Europeans to "fix" the deal loomed.

"Current prices reflect a premium for uncertainties. Investors are worried about supplies after Iran took a tough stance in its response to the United States," Wang Xiao, of Crude Research with Futures said, adding prices may fall if expectations for new sanctions ease.

European powers still want to hand Trump a plan to save the Iran nuclear deal next week. But they have also started work on protecting E.U.-Iranian business ties if the makes good on a threat to withdraw, six sources told

Markets will remain skittish as the May 12 deadline to rectify the deal approaches, ANZ Research said in note.

Iran resumed its role as a major in January 2016 when international sanctions against were lifted in return for curbs on Iran's nuclear program.

Aside from security concerns, growing U.S. crude supplies are capping price gains.

Intermediate crude for delivery in Midland slid for a fourth day on Thursday to hit its lowest in more than three-and-a-half years. WTI at Midland WTC-WTM traded as much as $14 a barrel below benchmark futures.

Surging production in the Permian basin has continued to outpace pipeline capacity, while local refining issues have exacerbated oversupply in the region, dealers told

Multi-year low spot market prices followed data that showed a 6.2-million-barrel jump in crude inventories last week.

The now produces more than top exporter

(Reporting by in and Henning Gloystein in SINGAPORE; Editing by and Kenneth Maxwell)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 08:38 IST