Oil rises to 2014 highs on Iran Sanctions, NAFTA deal

Reuters  |  NEW YORK 

By Jessica Resnick-Ault

The and forged a deal on Sunday to salvage the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), a trilateral pact with

Phil Flynn, an at in Chicago, said the NAFTA deal would boost prices because it "increases the growth prospects not only for and the U.S., but for as a whole."

Brent futures were up $1.55 a barrel at $84.28 by 12:24 p.m. EDT (1538 GMT). The session high of $84.73 was the highest since Nov. 2014. U.S. light crude futures were up $1.48 at $74.73 a barrel, after touching $74.89, also the highest in nearly four years.

Investors have loaded up on options that give the holder the right to buy Brent at $90 by the end of October. Open interest in call options at $90 has risen by nearly 12,000 lots in the past week to 38,000 lots, or 38 million barrels.

Exchange data shows hedge funds' combined net long position in Brent and U.S. light crude futures and options at its largest since late July, equivalent to about 850 million barrels.

Higher prices and a strong U.S. dollar could hit demand growth next year, analysts said. For now the market is focused on U.S. sanctions on Iran, which take force on Nov. 4 and are designed to cut crude exports from the No. 3 in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

"has attempted to downplay the impact of looming U.S. sanctions by claiming that it has no intention of reducing However, such optimistic claims are falling on deaf ears," said.

Several major buyers in and have signaled that they will cut purchases of Iranian oil. China's said it halved loadings of Iranian oil in September.

"If Chinese refiners do comply with U.S. sanctions more fully than expected, then the market balance is likely to tighten even more aggressively," wrote in a note.

U.S. spoke to Saudi on Saturday on ways to maintain sufficient supply.

"Even if they (Saudi Arabia) wanted to bend to Trump's wishes, how much spare capacity does the kingdom have?" said Stephen Innes, at in

With about 1.5 million barrels per day of Iranian oil expected to go offline on Nov. 4, prices could "rocket higher with the flashy $100 per barrel price tag indeed a reasonable-sounding target", he said.

(Reporting by Jessica Resnick-in New York and Amanda Cooper in London; Additional reporting by in SINGAPORE; Editing by and David Gregorio)

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

First Published: Mon, October 01 2018. 22:53 IST