Oil
prices reach highest since Nov 2014 on Venezuela, Iran worries
7
May, 2018
SINGAPORE
(Reuters) - U.S. oil prices rose above $70 a barrel on Monday for the
first time since November 2014 and Brent crude climbed to fresh
highs, buoyed as a deepening economic crisis in Venezuela threatened
the country’s already tumbling oil supply.
The
concerns added to worries over a looming decision on whether the
United States will walk away from a deal with Iran and instead
re-imposes sanctions on Tehran, keeping international oil markets on
edge.
Brent
crude oil futures were at $75.59 per barrel at 0546 GMT, up 72 cents,
or 1 percent, from their last close after climbing to $75.89 a barrel
earlier in the session, their highest since November 2014.
U.S.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 62 cents, or 0.9
percent, to $70.34 per barrel, up 66 cents from their last
settlement. Monday was the first time since November 2014 that WTI
rose above $70 per barrel.
Meanwhile,
China’s Shanghai crude oil futures, launched in March, broke their
dollar-converted record high of $71.32 per barrel by rising as far as
$72.54 on Monday.
Analysts
warned that the deepening economic crisis in major oil exporter
Venezuela threatened to further crimp its production and exports.
Shannon
Rivkin, investment director of Australia’s Rivkin Securities, said
that oil prices had been driven up due to “growing concerns over
the economic collapse of Venezuela and its oil industry, plus
possible new sanctions against Iran from the Trump administration”.
U.S.
oil firm ConocoPhillips has moved to take key Caribbean assets of
Venezuela’s state-run PDVSA to enforce a $2 billion arbitration
award, actions that could further impair PDVSA’s declining oil
production and exports.
Venezuela’s
oil output has halved since the early 2000s to just 1.5 million
barrels per day (bpd), as the South American country has failed to
invest enough to maintain its petroleum industry.
Beyond
Venezuela’s woes, Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at futures
brokerage AxiTrader, said “the big story this week is going to be
about oil and the Iran Nuclear deal”. Most market participants
expect Trump to withdraw from the pact, he said.
Iran
re-emerged as a major oil exporter in 2016 after international
sanctions against it were lifted in return for curbs on Iran’s
nuclear program.
Expressing
doubts over Iran’s sincerity, Trump has threatened to walk away
from the 2015 agreement by not extending sanctions waivers when they
expire on May 12, which would likely result in a reduction of Iran’s
oil exports.
Looming
over markets, however, is surging U.S. output, which has soared by
more than a quarter in the last two years, to 10.62 million bpd.
U.S.
output will likely rise further this year, towards or past Russia’s
11 million bpd, as its energy firms keep drilling for more.
U.S.
energy companies added nine oil rigs looking for new production in
the week to May 4, bringing the total count to 834, the highest level
since March 2015, energy services firm Baker Hughes said last Friday.
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