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As supply concerns increase, oil prices rise as the fading hope of a quick end to the Iran war reignites supply fears

The price of oil rose by?2% Tuesday, as the hopes of a deal to?end the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran faded. Meanwhile, the stark differences between Washington and Tehran on a proposed peace plan brought supply concerns back into the spotlight.

Brent crude futures rose $2 or 1.9% to $106.21 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate climbed $2.31 or 2.4% to $100.38 at 0726 GMT. Both benchmarks rose nearly 2.8% Monday.

U.S. president Donald Trump said Monday that the ceasefire agreement with Iran was "on life support". He cited disagreements on several demands such as the cessation on all fronts of hostilities, the lifting of the U.S. navy blockade, resumption in Iranian oil sales, and compensation for damage caused by war.

Tehran has also stressed its sovereignty over Strait of Hormuz through which a fifth or more of the world's oil and gas is transported.

Suvro Sarkar, DBS Bank's energy sector team leader, said that optimism about an imminent peace deal has waned. If we don't get a deal done by the end May then oil price risks are definitely on the table.

A survey released on Monday showed that OPEC's oil production in April was at its lowest level for more than 20 years.

Tim Waterer is the chief analyst at KCM Trade. He said that a genuine breakthrough towards a peace agreement could trigger an $8-$12 correction. Any escalation of blockade threats or escalation in tensions would push Brent prices back to $115+.

Amin Nasser, CEO of Saudi Aramco, warned on Monday about the potential for disruptions in oil exports across the Strait to delay the return to stability of the market until 2027. This would result in a loss?of around 100 million barrels per week.

Analysts in a survey predicted that U.S. crude stockpiles would be down around 1.7 millions barrels from the previous week.

Walt Chancellor is an energy'strategist with Macquarie Group. He said that the draw will be held against a background of "continued strong net waterborne export -flows" for crude and other products over the next few weeks.

Market participants also kept a close watch on President Trump’s meeting with Chinese president Xi Jinping scheduled for Thursday and Friday. Washington had imposed sanctions against three individuals and 'nine companies who facilitated Iranian oil shipments into China.

Tariffs?imposed by the U.S. and China trade war have stopped most Chinese imports from the U.S. of oil and LNG that were worth $8.4billion in 2024 - the year before Trump started his second term. (Reporting from Anmol Choubey and Trixie Yap, both in Singapore; editing by SonaliPaul, Thomas Derpinghaus, and Muralikumar Anantharaman.)

(source: Reuters)