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Peace efforts continue to hold as oil prices rise slightly before the long US weekend

Prices of oil climbed on Friday, just before the long holiday weekend here in 'the U.S.

Brent futures rose 46 cents or 0.64% to $72.26 per barrel at 0407 GMT. West Texas Intermediate rose 32 cents or 0.47% to $69.01 per barrel.

The U.S. market will be closed Friday in advance of Independence Day. Independence Day is celebrated on Saturday.

The two benchmarks had their lowest level since the U.S./Israeli War on Iran, which began in late February. Brent was up by 0.35% for the week and WTI rose by 0.43%. These were the lowest weekly movements in the past?months.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst for KCM Trade. He said that the market was cautiously optimistic, wanting to believe in the success of the peace effort, but hedging his bets till he saw real evidence on water.

After the two countries exchanged strikes over the weekend in response to an Iranian attack against a cargo vessel, shipping has partly resumed through the Strait of Hormuz.

Gulf producers are working on a production increase with the reopening of Strait of Hormuz. This is because the Strait of Hormuz used to carry one-fifth of daily oil and gas supplies in the world before the start of the war.

Kuwait's oil output jumped sharply in June to 1.65m barrels per day from?580,000 bpd, a source with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday. The OPEC member increased exports after the U.S. Iran interim peace agreement.

According to shipping and trade data, Saudi Aramco has switched to spot pricing in order to accelerate sales to Asia.

The spread between Brent front month and one-month forward has increased due to the increasing supply pressure. The six-month spread turned negative on June 24. The market turned negative Thursday. When the spread is negative, it means that the market is in a contango.

In a Friday note, ING analysts said that the return of this'supply' coincides with ongoing SPR releases. They were referring to the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

The market could see more buyers if "the forward curve moves into contango."

(source: Reuters)