Gulf News

Oil falls on Iran curb exemptions, demand fears

Brent crude futures were down 20 cents at $72.97 a barrel while WTI fell 12 cents to $62.98

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Oil prices declined yesterday after Washington granted sanctions exemptions to top buyers of Iranian oil, lifting supply concerns and turning the market’s focus to worries that an economic slowdown may curb fuel demand.

Benchmark Brent crude futures were down 20 cents at $72.97 (Dh268) a barrel by 0929 GMT. US West Texas Intermedia­te crude futures were at $62.98 a barrel, down 12 cents from their last settlement.

Washington gave 180-day exemptions to eight importers — China, India, South Korea, Japan, Italy, Greece, Taiwan and Turkey. This group takes as much as three-quarters of Iran’s seaborne oil exports, trade data shows.

Iran’s crude exports could fall to little more than 1 million barrels per day (bpd) in November, roughly a third of their mid-2018 peak. But traders and analysts say that figure could rise from December as importers use their waivers.

Waiver

China was given a waiver to import around 360,000 bpd from Iran during the exemption period, sources said, while South Korea was given a daily quota of around 130,000 bpd. Japan yesterday said it would soon raise imports from Iran in accordance with the waivers.

The US on Monday restored sanctions targeting Iran’s oil, banking and transport sectors and threatened more action to stop what Washington called its “outlaw” policies, steps Tehran called economic warfare and vowed to defy.

Meanwhile, concerns about demand continue. The trade dispute between the United States and China threatens growth in the world’s two biggest economies and currency weakness is pressuring economies in Asia, including India and Indonesia.

On the supply side, oil is ample despite the sanctions as output from the world’s top three producers — Russia, the US and Saudi Arabia — is rising.

The three countries combined produced more than 33 million bpd for the first time in October, meaning they alone meet more than a third of the world’s almost 100 million bpd of crude oil consumptio­n.

Amid ample supply, top crude exporter Saudi Arabia has cut the December price for its Arab Light grade for Asian customers. The price pressure on oil has scared off financial traders.

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