Oil prices rise as focus returns to supply concerns

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Nasralla

Brent crude was up 17 cents at $78.35 a barrel at 1044 GMT. The global benchmark fell 2 percent on Thursday after rising on Wednesday to its highest since May 22 at $80.13.

U.S. Intermediate (WTI) futures were up 27 cents at $68.86 a barrel after dropping 2.5 percent on Thursday.

Brent was set for a 2 percent weekly rise and WTI 1.7 percent.

Price rises were capped after U.S. Secretary said Saudi Arabia, other members of OPEC and were to be admired for trying to prevent a spike in global prices.

"We think the market will have another go at pushing Brent above $80 a barrel," Harry Tchilinguirian, at French BNP Paribas, told the Global Oil Forum.

"The looming supply gap that the loss of Iranian represents is still ahead of us and that early November U.S. deadline to reduced imports to zero is fast approaching."

The is renewing sanctions on after withdrawing from a nuclear deal forged in 2015 between and world powers.

reimposed some of the financial sanctions from Aug. 6, while those affecting Iran's petroleum sector will come into force from Nov. 4.

Indian refiners, traditionally major buyers of Iranian crude, will cut their monthly crude loadings from for September and October by nearly half from earlier this year.

Supply concerns were stoked by data showing U.S. crude production fell by 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 10.9 million bpd last week as the industry faced pipeline capacity constraints.

Meanwhile, the International Agency on Thursday warned that although the was tightening and world would reach 100 million bpd in the next three months, global economic risks were also mounting.

"As we move into 2019, a possible risk to our forecast lies in some key emerging economies, partly due to currency depreciations versus the U.S. dollar, raising the cost of imported energy," the agency said.

"In addition, there is a risk to growth from an escalation of trade disputes," the Paris-based agency said.

will not buckle to U.S. demands in any trade negotiations, the major state-run Daily newspaper said, while U.S. said on he felt no pressure to strike a deal with

(Additional eporting by Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo; Editing by and Mark Potter)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, September 14 2018. 16:27 IST