Latest News

Investors weigh Middle East peace prospects as they raise oil prices by $1

Early trade on Thursday saw oil prices rise by about $1, recovering from the sharp losses of the previous day as investors assessed the chances that a Middle East Peace Deal would be successful.

Brent crude futures rose 88 cents or 0.9% to $102.15 per barrel at 0032 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate rose $1.12 or 1.2% to $96.20 per barrel.

Both benchmarks fell more than 7% Wednesday, reaching two-week lows amid optimism about a possible ending to the Middle East conflict. They pared their losses however after U.S. president Donald Trump said that it was "too early" to have face-to-face discussions with Tehran, and a senior Iranian lawmaker said that the U.S. proposition was more like a wish-list than a real reality.

The outlook for the future is uncertain, according to Hiroyuki Kikukawa. He is chief strategist at Nissan Securities Investment.

Next week, Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping will meet.

Kikukawa stated that the main scenario was "that oil prices would remain elevated."

Iran said Wednesday that it was reviewing an American peace proposal, which sources say would end the war formally while leaving unresolved U.S. key demands that Iran suspends its nuclear program and opens the Strait of Hormuz.

According to a spokesperson for the Iranian Foreign Ministry quoted by ISNA, Tehran will convey its response. Trump stated that he believes Iran wants an agreement.

According to a Pakistani mediation source and another person who was briefed about the talks, an agreement on a 1-page memorandum would end the conflict.

Axios, a U.S.-based media outlet, reported that the U.S. Expect Iranian responses to several key issues in the next 48-hours, citing sources who said?this was the?closest that the parties have come to an accord since the beginning of the war.

Even if there is a peace agreement, oil supplies will be tighter in the coming weeks. It will take weeks to get oil from the Middle East Gulf to refiners around world. Oil companies will therefore continue to deplete their storage tanks to meet summer peak demand.

Energy Information Administration reported on Wednesday that U.S. crude and fuel inventories decreased last week as countries tried to offset supply disruptions caused by the Iran Crisis.

Last week, crude oil stocks dropped by 2.3m barrels. This was compared to analyst expectations of a 3.3m barrel draw. (Reporting and editing by Cynthia Osterman, Tom Hogue, and Yuka Obayashi)

(source: Reuters)