Oil up as Iran nuclear deal talks continue

Oil was up Monday morning in Asia, with investor sentiment boosted by signs of the US’ continuing economic recovery from Covid-19 and the improved outlook for fuel demand. Investors are also monitoring the progress of talks to revive a 2015 Iranian nuclear deal that is likely to increase global crude supply.

Brent oil futures gained 0.63% to $66.77 by 1:13 AM ET (5:13 AM GMT), with the contract rolling over to the Aug. 21 contract on May 23. WTI futures were up 0.63% to $63.98.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said during the previous week that the US was “ready” to lift sanctions on the country’s oil, banking and shipping sectors, causing oil prices to fall.

“Iran’s oil production has been rising in recent months, likely in anticipation of a lifting of the sanctions,” ANZ analysts said in a note.

However, Iranian speaker of parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Sunday that the expiry of the three-month monitoring deal between Iran and the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency would cease the latter’s access to images from inside some Iranian nuclear sites. Talks between the two sides continue in Vienna throughout the week.

On the weather front, investors are monitoring a low-pressure system located over the western Gulf of Mexico, which has a 60% chance of becoming a cyclone in the next 48 hours according to the US National Hurricane Center.

Elsewhere in the US, the spread of Covid-19 continues to slow down, with the country ending its first week since June 2020 with no days of infections exceeding 30,000. Death rates continue to fall in France and Italy, furthering improving the fuel demand outlook.

In Asia, however, several countries continue to deal with Covid-19 outbreaks. The total number of Covid-19 deaths in India stood at 303,720 as of May 24, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

Meanwhile, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies (<a href=’https://theenergyyear.com/companies-institutions/opec/’>OPEC+) has reportedly pushed back its Joint Technical Committee meeting, initially due to have taken place on May 25, has reportedly been postponed to May 31. However, the cartel’s ministerial meeting will still take place as scheduled on Jun. 1.

First published on Investing.com

Recent Posts

UK allows oil exploration in North Sea wind project zones

The UK's hydrocarbons regulator has awarded 31 new exploration licences in the country's North Sea waters, Reuters reported on Friday Read More

2 days ago

ExxonMobil closes acquisition of Pioneer, creating Permian powerhouse

ExxonMobil announced the closing of its USD 60-billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources on Friday, a move that solidifies its… Read More

2 days ago

BP-Eni joint venture Azule Energy enters Namibia’s Orange Basin

BP-Eni joint venture Azule Energy has entered a strategic farm-in agreement with Rhino Resources in Namibia's offshore Orange Basin, the… Read More

2 days ago

Chariot starts gas drilling campaign in Morocco

Africa-focused energy group Chariot has spudded the RZK-1 exploration well on the Gaufrette prospect at the Loukos Onshore licence in… Read More

2 days ago

Touchstone acquires Trinidad E&P player Trinity

Touchstone Exploration has acquired Trinidad-focused Trinity Exploration & Production in an all-shares deal, the Canadian upstream player said on Wednesday Read More

3 days ago

ExxonMobil “optimistic and pushing forward” with Mozambique’s Rovuma LNG

ExxonMobil is "optimistic and pushing forward" with the Rovuma LNG project in Mozambique and eyes an FID by the year's… Read More

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.