Oil Holds Gain With US-Iran Nuclear Talks to Resume This Week
Oil held near its strongest close since July, with US-Iran talks set to resume this week against a backdrop of massed American forces in the Middle East.
Brent traded below $72 a barrel, after jumping almost 6% last week as US President Donald Trump said he was considering a limited military strike on Iran. The next round of talks in Geneva is slated for Thursday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS on Sunday he saw a “good chance” of a diplomatic solution to the standoff over his country’s nuclear program, while reiterating Tehran won’t be pressured by the US military buildup. The enrichment of uranium remains a sticking point for both sides.
Concerns about a Middle East conflict, coupled with several supply disruptions, have driven crude higher despite broad expectations for a global supply glut. A potential war would put shipments at risk in the Strait of Hormuz – the choke point for exports from the world’s top oil-producing region. Options traders have been charging big premiums to protect against a spike for weeks.
ongstanding bear Goldman Sachs Group Inc. boosted its oil price forecasts, citing a lower stockpiles build in developed countries. The bank said it still sees declines from current levels, with Brent ending the year at $60, but that a combination of sanctions and hits to supply are keeping prices higher than previously thought. Morgan Stanley also said on Monday it expects Brent to drift back toward $60 over time.
“Oil is rallying on risk, not tightness,” the bank’s analysts including Martijn Rats and Charlotte Firkins wrote in a note, referring to the recent push above $70. “Taken together, the combination of higher flat prices, freight and risk-reversal skew alongside softer prompt spreads and weaker physical differentials reads as a classic signature of a market pricing geopolitical optionality and tail-risk hedging demand, rather than responding to immediate scarcity.”
The risk of a disruption has also pushed benchmark freight markets north of $150,000 a day for the first time since 2020, according to data from the Baltic Exchange in London.
Traders are pricing the threat of disruption through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage separating Iran and the Arabian Peninsula, that tankers must transit to deliver cargoes worldwide. Tehran would only need to disrupt flows, rather than fully blockade the strait, to impact global oil markets.
Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait all ship oil through Hormuz, with the majority of their cargoes heading to Asia. Iran pumps more than 3 million barrels a day of crude, and most flows to China.
Prices:
Brent for April settlement was little changed at $71.84 a barrel as of 8:40 a.m. in New York.
WTI for April delivery was at $66.63 a barrel.
Source: Bloomberg.com