Latest News

Oil gains hold as Iran puts investors on edge

Oil prices continued to rise on Monday, after gaining more than 2% the previous session. Tensions between the U.S.

Brent crude futures increased 12 cents or 0.18% to $66 per barrel at 0127 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was $61.21 per barrel, up $14 cents or 0.23%.

Both benchmarks closed?on?Friday at their highest levels since January 14. In the coming days, a U.S. aircraft carrier and?strike force are expected to arrive at the Middle East.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said on Thursday that the U.S. has an "armada," heading towards Iran, but he hoped not to have to use it. He had told Tehran, not to kill protesters, or restart its nuclear programme.

A senior Iranian official stated on Friday that Iran would consider any attack as "an all-out battle against us."

Tony Sycamore, IG's market analyst, said that President Trump's announcement of a U.S. armada heading toward Iran reignited fears about supply disruptions. This added a premium to crude prices and encouraged risk aversion more widely this morning.

After completing maintenance on one of the three moorings, Kazakhstan's Caspian?Pipeline Consortium reported that it had returned to full capacity at its terminal at?the Black Sea Coast on Sunday.

As a winter storm began to sweep the United States on Friday, the crude and natural-gas production dropped and spot power prices rose.

JPMorgan analysts wrote in a report that "Oil production has been also affected by the severe winter weather with losses of about 250,000 bpd" (barrels a day). This includes declines in Bakken, Oklahoma and parts of Texas. (Reporting and editing by Thomas Derpinghaus; Florence Tan, reporting)

(source: Reuters)