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Oil prices rise on worries about disruptions of supply in Venezuela and Iran

Oil prices rise on worries about disruptions of supply in Venezuela and Iran
Oil prices rise on worries about disruptions of supply in Venezuela and Iran

On 'Friday, oil prices rose for the second consecutive day, resulting in their third weekly increase, due to uncertainty over future supply from Venezuela and Iranian unrest.

Brent futures gained 40 cents or 0.7% to $62.39 a barrel at 0400 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI), however, rose 35 cents or 0.6% to $58.11.

Brent will rise 2.7% this week while WTI is up 1.4%.

"Bottlenecks of the flow of sanctioned barley and steady demand signals seem to counter the backdrop for an oversupplied in 2026 at least for now," said Priyanka Sahdeva, Senior market analyst at Phillip Nova. "Escalation of geopolitical tension adds to current momentum in oil price."

Prices rose after U.S. President Donald Trump's seizure last week of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his claims that the U.S. would control the South American nation's oil industry.

Concerns about supply have been heightened by civil unrest in Iran, a major Middle Eastern oil producer. Also, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has spread to Russian oil exports. Tina Teng is a market strategist with Moomoo ANZ. She said that the 'price surge' was primarily caused by Trump's claim of control over Venezuela's oil export. This could have led to a price hike from previously discounted sales. Sources familiar with the situation say that oil major Chevron, trading houses Vitol, Trafigura and others are competing to secure deals from the U.S. Government to export Venezuelan crude oil.

Trump demanded Venezuela grant the U.S. access to all of its oil sectors just days after Maduro was captured on Saturday. ?U.S. Officials have stated that Washington will continue to control the oil revenues and sales of the country indefinitely.

Two sources claim that the companies are disputing the initial deals for the marketing of up to 50,000,000 barrels of oil which the state-run oil firm?PDVSA accumulated during a severe embargo involving four tanker seizure.

The market will focus on how Venezuelan oil stored in storage is sold and delivered in the next few days. Teng said that if there is no limit on sales, the oversupply issue could continue to be a problem.

Haitong Futures reported in a Friday report that oil prices surged following several days of relative calm, partially correcting an earlier?neglect' of geopolitical risk. Internet monitoring group NetBlocks reported a nationwide internet blackout in Iran on Thursday. Protests over economic hardships were continuing in Tehran, Mashhad, Isfahan, and other parts of the country.

Haitong Futures stated that global inventories continue to rise, but oversupply is the main factor that could limit the gains.

Haitong Futures said that unless risks in the region of Iran escalate, the recovery is likely to be limited and difficult to sustain. Sam Li reported from Beijing, and Jeslyn Lerh edited the report in Singapore.

(source: Reuters)