Oil Hits 2019 High

By Stephanie Kelly
Monday, April 22, 2019

Oil prices jumped more than 2 percent on Monday to a near six-month high, on growing concern about tight global supplies after the United States announced a further clampdown on Iranian oil exports.

Washington said it will eliminate in May all waivers allowing eight economies to buy Iranian oil without facing U.S. sanctions.

"The geopolitical risk premium is back in the oil market, in a big way," said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC in New York. "Most, if not all, legitimate commercial interests will avoid Iran oil purchases. Iran's flow will be reduced to a trickle."

Brent crude futures rose $2.07, or 2.88 percent, to settle at $74.04 a barrel. The session high of $74.52 a barrel for the international benchmark was the highest since Nov. 1.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures climbed $1.70, or 2.66 percent, to settle at $65.70 a barrel. The contract hit $65.92 a barrel, the highest since Oct. 31.

In November the United States reimposed sanctions on exports of Iranian oil but granted waivers to Iran's eight main buyers: China, India, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Turkey, Italy and Greece. They were allowed to keep making limited purchases for six months.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reiterated that Washington's goal was to bring down exports of Iranian oil to zero and said there were no plans for a grace period beyond May 1.

U.S. officials are seeking ways to prevent Iran from circumventing oil sanctions, a senior administration official said.

Iran said the decision not to renew the waivers has "no value" but Tehran was in touch with European partners and neighbors and would "act accordingly," Iranian news agencies reported, citing the Foreign Ministry.

Another drop in Iranian exports would further squeeze supply in a tight market. The United States has also sanctioned OPEC member Venezuela, and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers including Russia have voluntarily cut output, which has helped raise oil prices more than 35 percent this year.

Iran's biggest oil customers are China and India. India hopes Washington will allow allies to keep buying some Iranian oil instead of halting the purchases altogether from May, a source familiar with U.S.-India talks said.

Trump said Saudi Arabia and other OPEC nations could "more than make up" for any drop in Iranian oil supplies.

Saudi Arabia said it would coordinate with other producers to ensure an adequate crude supply and a balanced market.

"By and large, we expect the Saudis to up output in likely capping Brent price advances to around the $75-76 area followed by some leveling through much of the spring period," Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates, said in a note.


(Additional reporting by Alex Lawler and Henning Gloystein; Editing by David Gregorio and Susan Thomas)

Categories: Finance Energy Oil

Related Stories

Aramco Expands US Partnerships with $30B in New Deals

Seatrium Maintains $12.8B Order Book on Renewables and FPSO Progress

Petrobras’ New FPSO Sets Sail From South Korea to Brazil's Santos Basin

Eneos Warns on Skyrocketing Costs fo Offshore Wind

Malaysia Issues First Offshore CCS Permit to Petronas Subsidiary

Sponsored: Energy and Finance Chiefs Call for Sound Policy, Stable Frameworks at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Energy Sector Urged to Scale AI Adoption at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Policy, AI, and Capital Take Center Stage at ADIPEC 2025

Russia's Lukoil Takes Up Gunvor’s Offer for Foreign Assets

How Hot Is Your Cable? Understanding Subsea Cable Thermal Performance

Current News

BP Hires Seatrium to Deliver Tiber FPU in Gulf of America

Venture Global, Tokyo Gas Ink 20-Year LNG Supply Deal

Greater Sunrise Moves to Next Phase with Timor-Leste, Woodside Deal

Russia Seeks to Boost Oil Exports to China as Sanctions Tighten

Blackford Dolphin Semi-Sub to Keep Drilling Offshore India

Aramco Expands US Partnerships with $30B in New Deals

Pakistan Greenlights TPOC-Led Offshore Exploration in Block-C

TechnipFMC to Supply Subsea Systems for Eni’s Maha Deepwater Project

SED Energy’s GHTH Rig Kicks Off Ops for PTTEP

MODEC Forms Dedicated Mooring Solutions Unit

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com