Business World

Crude oil falls but Iran sanction fears limit losses

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NEW YORK — Oil prices slid more than 1% on Tuesday as the dollar remained near a four-month high, but worries that US President Donald Trump will pull out of the Iran nuclear deal underpinne­d the market.

The US dollar surged into positive territory for 2018 and broke past key levels against several currencies as a divergence between growth and the interest rate outlook versus other countries spurred investors to chase the currency higher. A strong dollar makes greenback-denominate­d oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.

“The strength of the dollar is where the pressure is coming from,” said Gene McGillian, vice- president at Tradition Energy.

The risk of the US pulling out of the Iran nuclear deal, resulting in sanctions on the producing nation, has already largely been priced in, underpinni­ng the market, he said.

Brent crude for July delivery settled at $ 73.13 a barrel, down $ 1.56 or 2.1% in the session. The June contract expired on Monday, settling up 53 cents at $ 75.17.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude for June delivery settled down $ 1.32, or nearly 2%, at $ 67.25 a barrel. Crude extended losses briefly in postsettle­ment trade, after industry trade group the American Petroleum Institute released weekly inventory figures showing a larger- than- expected crude stockpile build.

Oil prices rose on Monday as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu presented what he called evidence of a secret Iranian nuclear weapons program. Tehran has denied ever seeking nuclear weapons.

But analysts said the lack of a smoking gun took some of the heat out of oil prices.

Olivier Jakob of PetroMatri­x said the announceme­nt “did not bring anything new to the table,” and the market therefore shed some of the previous day’s gains.

Trump has given Britain, France and Germany a May 12 deadline to fix what he views as the flaws of the 2015 nuclear deal, or he will reimpose sanctions.

Still, crude prices were within striking distance of a more than three-year high hit in late April, and analysts said the market is sensitive to any developmen­ts on Iranian sanctions.

Growing US crude production and stockpiles have weighed on the market. Ahead of weekly data, crude stockpiles were forecast building last week while refined product inventorie­s were seen declining, a preliminar­y Reuters poll showed on Monday.

The API released its data at 4: 30 p. m. EDT ( 2030 GMT) on Tuesday, and the official government report is due at 10:30 a.m. EDT on Wednesday. —

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