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Oil drops over 1% after reports of a possible US-Iran ceasefire agreement

Oil futures dropped more than 1% a day earlier and are on course for the steepest weekly decline since early April. This is due to reports that U.S. officials and Iranian officials reportedly agreed to extend their ceasefire agreement, although it has not yet been finalized.

Brent crude futures fell $1.04 or 1.1% to $92.67 per barrel at 0330 GMT. U.S. crude oil futures dropped $1.26 or 1.4% to $87.64 per barrel. Brent fell 10.5% this past week, the steepest drop since the end of the week on April 6. WTI dropped 9.2%, the biggest weekly loss since April 13.

Sources say that the U.S. reached an agreement with Iran on Thursday, extending a ceasefire, and lifting restrictions on shipping in the 'Strait of Hormuz. However, President Donald Trump is yet to sign off on it, and Iranian state-run media said it was not finalized.

"Consensus is that the conflict is over and a deal will be reached. "As long as this narrative is true, crude oil can continue to decline towards trendline support at the low $80s," IG Analyst Tony Sycamore stated.

Prices were volatile recently, with both benchmarks swinging as much as six dollars on the back of conflicting signals about a possible ending to the three-month U.S./Israeli war against?Iran as well as the potential reopening of Strait of Hormuz -- a vital conduit for a fifth of world oil and liquefied natural gas.

The maritime chokepoint is still only a fraction of its pre-war traffic. ING analysts said that a reopening would provide some immediate relief for the oil market but a full recovery is still uncertain.

In a recent note, ING stated that "upstream oil production has dropped significantly since the war. Producers have shut down production to deal with storage issues." "The recovery in upstream production is more gradual than immediate."

The region's refineries need to increase their output. It will take some time to rebuild, as this infrastructure was attacked earlier in the conflict. Helen Clark, Sudarshan Varadan and Himani Sarkar contributed to the reporting; Himani Sarkar edited by Thomas Derpinghaus.

(source: Reuters)