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Weekly oil drop due to Iran risk receding and oversupply concerns

The oil price was little changed Friday, after falling the previous session. It is set to fall for a second consecutive week, as concerns about an Iranian conflict, which could affect supply, have receded.

Brent crude oil futures were up 3 cents or 0.04% at $67.55 per barrel at 0205 GMT, after dropping 2.7% the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude oil rose by 1 cent, or 0.02% to $62.85, after falling 2.8%.

Brent prices will drop by 0.8% while WTI is expected to fall by 1.1%. Prices rose earlier in the week as investors worried that the U.S. might attack Iran, a major Middle Eastern oil producer over its nuclear program. However, comments made by U.S. president Donald Trump on Thursday that the U.S. may strike a deal with Iran within the next month pushed prices down.

The oil prices have fallen "amid signs that the U.S. wants more time to'reach a nuclear deal with 'Iran. This reduces the near-term risk premium," IG Analyst Tony Sycamore wrote in a recent note.

The International Energy Agency projected Thursday in its monthly report, that global oil demand will grow less than expected this year, and the overall supply is set to exceed the demand.

Sycamore, of IG, said that the decline on Thursday was exacerbated by data earlier this week showing a massive increase in U.S. crude stocks and growing expectations that an increased?Venezuelan oil supply would soon be available.

He said that there is a?expectation of Venezuelan oil supply returning to pre-blockade level in the months to come, which would be a rise from 880,000 barrels / day to?about 1.25 million bpd.

A White House official on energy said that the U.S. Treasury would issue additional allowances this week to ease sanctions against Venezuelan energy.

Chris Wright, the U.S. Secretary for Energy, said Thursday that oil sales from Venezuela controlled by?the?U.S. Since the January capture of President Nicolas Maduro, the United States has collected over $1 billion in oil sales. Another $5 billion is expected in the coming months. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger, Lewis Jackson and Sam Li in Beijing)

(source: Reuters)