Latest News

After the Gaza agreement, oil prices have fallen slightly as the risk premium has diminished.

The oil prices fell slightly on Friday, after falling 1.6% in the previous session. This was due to the fact that the risk premium in the market had decreased after Israel and Hamas reached an agreement to implement the first phase of the plan to end Gaza's war.

Brent crude futures fell 7 cents to $65.15 per barrel at 0338 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 2 cents, to $61.49.

Israel and Hamas, a militant Palestinian group, signed a ceasefire on Thursday as part of the first phase in President Donald Trump's initiative for ending the Gaza war.

The deal was ratified by Israel's government on Friday. It will see the end of the fighting, Israel withdrawing from Gaza in part, and Hamas releasing all hostages that it has captured since the initial attack which sparked the war in exchange for hundreds Israeli prisoners.

Both benchmarks rose around 1% on a weekly scale after a steep drop last week.

The stalled progress in a Ukraine deal is a sign of possible sanctions against Russia. Russia is the second largest oil exporter in the world.

Daniel Hynes said that the Gaza ceasefire agreement was a significant step in ending the war of two years, which has increased the risk of oil disruptions.

Hynes stated that "this (deal) saw the emphasis move back to an impending oil surplus as OPEC continues with the unwinding production cuts."

A smaller-than-expected November hike in output agreed by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies (OPEC+) on Sunday eased some of those oversupply concerns.

BMI analysts wrote in a Friday note that "markets' expectations of a sharp increase in crude supply did not manifest themselves in significantly lower prices."

The latest rise in production was lower than initially feared, contributing to a small rise in the prices for the entire week," they stated.

Investors worry that a prolonged U.S. shutdown will dampen the American economic climate and affect oil demand. The United States is the largest crude consumer in the world. (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue, Christian Schmollinger and Sudarshan Varadhan)

(source: Reuters)