Crude Prices Slide on Possible Iran Nuclear Deal with US

Crude Prices Slide on Possible Iran Nuclear Deal with US

March WTI crude oil (CLH26) today is down -0.62 (-0.99%), and March RBOB gasoline (RBH26) is down -0.0027 (-0.14%).

Crude oil and gasoline prices gave up an early advance today and turned lower, with crude falling to a 2-week low.  Today’s rally in the dollar index ($DXY) to a 1-week high is bearish for energy prices.  Losses in crude accelerated today after Iran said it has reached a “general agreement” with the US on a nuclear deal.

Geopolitical risks between the US and Iran eased today and weighed on crude prices after Iran said it had reached a “general agreement” with the US on a nuclear deal that would lift sanctions on Iran and reduce the risk of war in the Middle East.

Crude prices also have a negative carryover from last Friday when Reuters reported that some OPEC+ members see the scope for the group to resume oil production increases in April, believing concerns of a global supply glut are overblown.  OPEC+ is scheduled to meet again online on March 1 to discuss the situation.

Mounting crude supplies in floating storage are a bearish factor for oil prices.  According to Vortexa data, about 290 million bbl of Russian and Iranian crude are currently in floating storage on tankers, more than 50% higher than a year ago, due to blockades and sanctions on Russian and Iranian crude.

Escalation of geopolitical risk in the Middle East has added a risk premium to crude oil, supporting prices.  The Wall Street Journal said last Wednesday that the US has discussed seizing tankers carrying Iranian oil.  Also, the US is sending a second aircraft carrier strike group to the Middle East to prepare for military action should nuclear talks with Iran fail.  The US Department of Transportation recently issued a maritime advisory stating that American-flagged ships should stay as far as possible from Iranian waters when navigating the Strait of Hormuz.  Iran is OPEC’s fourth-largest producer, and a US attack on the country could disrupt its 3.3 million bpd of crude production and potentially close the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of the world’s oil passes.

An increase in crude exports from Venezuela is also boosting global oil supplies and is bearish for prices.  Reuters reported last Monday that Venezuelan crude exports rose to 800,000 bpd in January from 498,000 bpd in December.

Source link