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Prices of oil rise amid supply concerns as fragile US-Iran negotiations continue

The oil prices increased in the early Asian trading on Tuesday as negotiations to end the "war" between the United States of America and Iran appeared 'fragile.' Tehran’s response to the U.S. proposal highlighted stark differences which kept supply concerns alive.

Brent crude futures rose 30 cents or 0.29% to $104.51 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate was up 31 cents or 0.32% to $98.38 at 00:02 GMT. Both benchmarks rose by nearly 2.8% Monday.

U.S. president Donald Trump stated on Monday that the Iranian ceasefire was "on life support." He cited disagreements on several demands such as the cessation on all fronts of hostilities, the removal?of a U.S. Naval Blockade, resumption Iranian oil sales and compensation for damage caused by war.

Tehran also emphasized its sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz,?which is responsible for about a fifth of all global oil and liquefied gas flows.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst at KCM Trade. He said in an email that as long as US-Iran talks remain unresolved and physical flow through the Strait of Hormuz remains restricted, prices should hold above $100.

He said that a genuine breakthrough towards a peace agreement could trigger an $8-12 correction. Any escalation of blockade threats or escalation in price would push Brent prices back to $115+.

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

Amin Nasser, CEO of Saudi Aramco, warned on Monday that disruptions in oil exports across the Strait could delay the return of market stability until as late as 2027. This would result in a loss of around 100 million barrels per week.

The Trump administration announced Monday plans to lend 53.3 million barrels from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve to help temper the oil markets.

The first shipment to Turkey was crude oil from the U.S. SPR, according to ship-tracking data.

Washington imposed sanctions against three individuals and nine firms, including those based in Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates and Oman. They were sanctioned for facilitating Iranian oil shipments into China.

Separately, on Monday, the Wall Street Journal reported that the UAE had conducted military strikes against Iran, including an early April attack on a refinery located on Iran's Lavan Island. Reports said that the UAE had not acknowledged the strikes publicly. Reporting by Anmol Chaubey, Bengaluru. Editing by SonaliPaul

(source: Reuters)