Crude prices touch 3.5-year high despite Trump's demand

Opec together with a group of non-Opec producers led by Russia started to withhold output in 2017 to prop up the market.

Update: 2018-07-06 00:58 GMT
Brent crude futures were at $77.99 a barrel at 1345 GMT, down 25 cents.

London: Oil edged lower on Thursday but still stood not far off its highest in three and half years, boosted by potential disruptions to flows from Iran and West Asia despite a fresh demand from US President Donald Trump that Opec cut prices.

Brent crude futures were at $77.99 a barrel at 1345 GMT, down 25 cents.

US crude futures were also down 25 cents at $73.89, not far from Tuesday’s three and half year high above $75.

“If Trump continues to believe that Opec are not doing enough, we would not rule out an SPR (Strategic Petroleum Reserve) release from the US, or possibly even export restrictions on petroleum products,” ING said in a note.

“However with plenty of uncertainty over Iranian supply, and the Syncrude outage in Canada, the market is likely to remain fairly well supported in the near term.”

Trump again on Wednesday accused the Opec of driving up fuel prices. “The Opec Monopoly must remember that gas prices are up & they are doing little to help,” Trump wrote on his personal Twitter account. “If anything, they are driving prices higher as the United States defends many of their members for very little $’s.” “This must be a two way street,” he wrote, adding in block capitals, “REDUCE PRICING NOW!”

Opec together with a group of non-Opec producers led by Russia started to withhold output in 2017 to prop up the market.

Recent price rises have also been spurred by a US announcement that it plans to reintroduce sanctions against Iran from November, targeting oil exports.

Opec and Russia said in June they were willing to raise output to address concerns of supply shortages due to unplanned disruptions from Venezuela to Libya, and likely also to replace a potential fall in Iranian supplies due to United States sanctions.

Despite these measures, Goldman Sachs said in a July 4 note to clients that “the market will remain in deficit” in the second half of the year. 

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