Business World

Oil prices up on expected fall in exports from Iran

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NEW YORK — Crude oil prices rose more than 1% on Friday as US sanctions against Iran looked set to tighten supply, but futures contracts posted a weekly decline as investors worried that global trade disputes could slow economic growth and hurt demand for energy.

Benchmark Brent crude oil settled 74 cents higher at $72.96 a barrel on Friday. US light crude was 82 cents higher at $67.63 a barrel. A sell-off on Wednesday left both benchmarks down for the week overall, with Brent off 0.5% and US crude 1.2% lower.

Hedge funds and other money managers cut their bullish positions on US crude in the week ending Aug. 7 to the lowest level since June, data showed on Friday.

Prices are expected to remain under pressure as US gasoline demand slows going into the autumn and refiners shut for maintenanc­e, pushing more crude into storage, said Tariq Zahir, managing member at Tyche Capital in New York.

“I think it now comes down to the point of what we see in demand numbers.”

US crude supplies fell less than expected in the latest week, and data released on Friday showed US energy companies this week added the most oil rigs since May.

Drillers added 10 oil rigs in the week to Aug. 10, bringing the total to 869, the most since March 2015, General Electric Co.’s Baker Hughes energy services firm said on Friday.

Escalating trade disputes between the US, China and other countries have dimmed the outlook for economic growth and boosted the US dollar, making oil more expensive for consumers using other currencies.

Currencies of major emerging economies including China, India and Turkey have slumped.

Despite these worries, prices got a boost from US sanctions against Iran, which from November will affect oil exports from that country. Although the European Union, China and India oppose the US sanctions against Iran, many are expected to bow to US pressure.

Analysts expect Iranian crude exports to fall by between 500,000 and 1.3 million barrels per day, with buyers in Japan, South Korea and India already dialing back orders. The reduction will depend on whether buyers of Iranian oil receive waivers that would allow some imports.

“The recent cooling down of the market, with short-term supply tensions easing, currently lower prices, and lower demand growth might not last,” the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in a monthly report on Friday.

“As oil sanctions against Iran take effect, perhaps in combinatio­n with production problems elsewhere, maintainin­g global supply might be very challengin­g.” —

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