The Borneo Post

Oil prices fall as Iran crude tanker exports surge, US adds more rigs

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SINGAPORE: Oil prices fell yesterday as increased exports from Iran undermined efforts by other oil producers to curb a global fuel supply overhang and as US drillers increased activity for a 10th straight week.

Brent crude futures, the internatio­nal benchmark for oil prices, were trading at US$ 56.84 per barrel at 0535 GMT ( 00.35 am ET), down 26 cents from their last close.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude oil futures were trading at US$ 53.70 per barrel, down 29 cents.

Traders said the lower prices were a result of rising exports from Iran that come just as other members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ( OPEC) cut supplies in an effort to end a global glut.

Iran has sold more than 13 million barrels of oil held on tankers at sea, capitalizi­ng on an OPEC output cut deal from which it is exempted to regain market share and court new buyers, according to industry sources and data.

The amount of Iranian oil held at sea has dropped to 16.4 million barrels, from 29.6 million barrels at the beginning of October, according to Thomson Reuters Oil Flows data. Before that sharp drop, the level had barely changed in 2016; it was 29.7 million barrels at the start of last year, the data showed. Iran’s surging tanker exports weren’t the only indicator of plentiful supplies.

US energy companies last week added oil rigs for a tenth week in a row, extending a recovery in activity into an eighth month as crude prices remained at levels at which many drillers can operate profitably.

“The next leg up in prices probably won’t occur until the traders see evidence that production levels are falling,” ANZ bank said on Monday. — Reuters

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