Oil prices fall as Iran nuclear deal retains support

Reuters  |  NEW YORK 

By Jessica Resnick-Ault

In another sign global supplies could rise further, data in the afternoon showed U.S. crude producers added 10 rigs in the latest week.

Crude prices remained just below multi-year highs, with Brent on track for a weekly 2.8 percent gain and U.S. crude a 1.2 percent weekly rise.

"It's the same witches brew of bullish stuff: Iran, Venezuela, the lack of alacrity by to bring more onto the market," said John Kilduff, partner at in

Brent crude settled down 35 cents at $77.12 a barrel, just below the $78-level hit on Thursday, its highest since November 2014. The benchmark contract remained lower in post-settlement trade.

U.S. light crude was down 66 cents at $70.70, off a 3-1/2 year high of $71.89 it hit on Thursday.

The plans to reintroduce sanctions against Iran, which pumps about 4 percent of the world's oil, after this week abandoned a 2015 deal that limited Tehran's nuclear ambitions. Many analysts expect prices to rise as Iran's exports fall.

Still, British on Friday reiterated her support for the nuclear deal and agreed with Trump that talks were needed to established how U.S. sanctions would affect companies operating in

U.S. Jefferies said in a note it expects Iranian exports to start falling in the next few months. However, there were signs that other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will raise output to counter the disruption.

Jefferies said OPEC has the capacity "to replace the Iranian losses" but added: "Even if physical supply is held constant ... the market will still be faced with a precariously low level of spare capacity."

Outside OPEC, U.S. crude production reached another record high last week, hitting 10.7 million bpd which is up 27 percent since mid-2016. U.S. output is creeping closer to that of top Russia, which pumps about 11 million bpd.

U.S. drillers added rigs for the sixth straight week, bringing the total rig count to 844, highest since March 2015, General Electric Co's firm said. [RIG/U]

More than half the total are in Permian basin in west and eastern New Mexico, the nation's biggest Active units there increased by five this week to 463, the most since January 2015.

(Additional reporting by in Singapore; Editing by and Marguerita Choy)

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

First Published: Sat, May 12 2018. 01:04 IST