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Brent futures for the front-month extend gains following record monthly gain in March

Brent futures for the front-month extend gains following record monthly gain in March
Brent futures for the front-month extend gains following record monthly gain in March

Early Wednesday, oil prices rose, as Brent front-month contracts?extended a record rally in March, despite reports suggesting that the U.S., Iran, and other Middle East countries may be moving closer to a negotiated settlement of the 'war.

Brent front-month contract for June delivery rose?66cents or 0.63% at $104.63 per barrel by 0010 GMT. According to LSEG, the front-month Brent contract for June?delivery hit a monthly record gain of 64%.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures (WTI) for May increased by 96 cents, or 0.95%, to $102.34 a barrel. WTI futures in June rose by 46?cents, or 0.49%, to $93.62 a barrel.

"Even though diplomatic channels are still active, and the U.S. Administration is making intermittent comments predicting a quick end to the war, the combination between limited tangible diplomatic advances, continuing maritime attacks, as well as explicit threats aimed at energy assets, keeps supply risks skewed upwards," LSEG analysts wrote in a recent note.

Brent futures, June delivery, settled down by more than $3 on Tuesday after media reports that Iran's President was prepared to end the war.

The President Donald Trump told reporters Tuesday that the U.S. military campaign could be over in two to three weeks, and that Iran does not have to reach a settlement to end the conflict. This was his most direct declaration to date that he wanted to bring an end to the month-long battle.

Analysts say that even if the war ends, infrastructure damage will likely keep supplies tight.

Trump also said he would end the war without reopening Strait of Hormuz. This is a major route that carries 20% of the global oil and LNG trade, according to the Wall Street Journal.

A survey released on Tuesday showed that oil production by the Organization?of?the Petroleum?Exporting Counties (OPEC) fell 7.3 million barrels a day in March compared with the previous month. This shows the impact of forced export reductions due to the closure of Hormuz.

According to a survey of economists, the blockage in the strait and disruptions to output have caused analysts to raise their forecasts for annual oil prices by a record-breaking amount between February and March.

Brent crude is expected to average $82.85 per bar in 2026. This is about 30% more than the forecast made in February, which was $63.85, before the war.

The increase of $19 represents the highest annual forecasts since 2005.

(source: Reuters)