Arab Times

Bullish oil streak lifts Brent to strongest Q3 in 13 years

Gold set for quarterly gain

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AMSTERDAM, Sept 30, (RTRS): Oil edged higher on Friday as tensions around Iraqi Kurdistan threatened the region’s crude supplies, helping Brent prices to their strongest third-quarter performanc­e since 2004.

Global benchmark Brent crude was up 17 cents at $57.58 a barrel at 1225 GMT, notching up a thirdquart­er gain of around 20 percent.

The contract had reached its highest in more than two years earlier in the week, resulting in a fifth consecutiv­e weekly gain. This performanc­e is Brent’s longest weekly bull run since June 2016.

US crude traded up 9 cents at $51.65 a barrel, on track for its strongest third quarter in 10 years and its longest streak of weekly gains since January.

“Oil prices remain firm with the backdrop of tensions between Iraq/Turkey/Iran and Kurdistan still threatenin­g to halt up to 600,000 barrels per day of production from the semi-autonomous region,” said Jamie Campbell, head of natural resources at Panmure Gordon.

Iraq’s Kurds endorsed secession by nine to one in a referendum on Monday that has angered Turkey, the central government in Baghdad, and other powers, who fear the vote could lead to renewed conflict in the oil-rich region.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan called the vote illegitima­te and has threatened to break with past practice and deal only with the Baghdad government over oil exports from Iraq.

Iran has banned transporta­tion of oil products by Iranian companies to and from Iraq’s Kurdistan region, the semi-official Tasnim news agency said on Friday.

“No rapid solution to the crisis can be expected, which should continue to lend support to the oil price,” analysts at Commerzban­k wrote.

Most oil that flows through a pipeline from Iraq to Turkey comes from Kurdish sources and a cut-off would severely damage the Kurdish Regional Government, which relies on sales of crude for almost all its hard currency revenues.

So far, oil flows through the pipeline have been normal.

Oil price gains have also been supported this month by anticipate­d renewed demand from US refiners that were resuming operations after shutdowns due to Hurricane Harvey.

Even more bullish views have already started to appear in the oil options market that has seen a spike in activity at $100 a barrel, indicating some oil bulls are betting the price could trade around that level by this time next year.

Analysts polled by Reuters on a monthly basis also slightly lifted their 2017 price forecasts on Friday but were more sceptical of further gains in 2018.

However, Middle Eastern oil producers are concerned the recent price rise will incentivis­e more US shale production and push prices lower again.

Gold prices dipped on Friday as investors awaited US economic data that was expected to give more clues about a possible interest rate hike in December.

Spot gold was down 0.1 percent at $1,285.73 per ounce by 1215 GMT while US gold futures rose 0.02 percent to $1,289 per ounce.

Spot gold was on track to register a 2.5 percent decline in September, its largest monthly fall so far in 2017 and the biggest since November 2016, after the dollar strengthen­ed on the back of better-than-expected US economic data.

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