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Oil drops as Israel and Lebanon agree to a ceasefire

Oil prices dropped?on Friday as a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon?boosted hopes of a wider agreement to end the U.S./Israeli war against Iran?that?could?lead to a?reopening?of the Strait of Hormuz.

Brent 'futures' were down 87 cents or 0.89% at $96.92 per barrel as of 0458 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 78 cents or 0.81% to $95.24, erasing gains made earlier in the week.

Brent and WTI both rose by about 2% Wednesday following renewed Middle East hostilities, including Iranian attacks against Kuwait and U.S. Military?strikes close to the Strait of Hormuz.

Israel and Lebanon announced late Wednesday that they had agreed to implement "a ceasefire". This raised hopes for an agreement between Washington and Tehran. Washington has made it clear that any deal would be conditional on the cessation of fighting between Israel and Lebanon.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, suggested Wednesday that negotiations with Iran could progress as early as this weekend.

Abbas Araqchi, the Iranian Foreign Minister, said on Wednesday that Tehran's contacts with Washington had not been cut off but there was no progress in the negotiations. Both sides were examining the texts they exchanged.

The Republican-led House in the U.S. approved a Resolution on Wednesday that would prevent Trump from continuing his war against Iran. The resolution needs Senate approval, and a two-thirds majority in both chambers of Congress to take effect.

The Energy Information Administration announced?on Wednesday that U.S. crude stocks fell by 8,000,000 barrels, to 433.7 Million barrels for the week ending May 29. This was a far greater drop than analysts expected in a poll, which predicted a 4-million barrel draw.

The International Energy Agency warned Tuesday that global oil stocks could reach critical levels before peak summer demand, if the current stock?drawing pace continues. This is despite Chinese crude exports dropping by?6m barrels per day from March to May.

"Inventories are a cushion that has helped the oil market." Even if oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz resume imminently, a note by ING stated that the recovery would be gradual and slow.

This suggests that inventories will continue to tighten in the third quarter. The upside risk for prices is therefore high. (Reporting and editing by Sam Li, Lewis Jackson and SonaliPaul)

(source: Reuters)