Oil prices steadied near 3-1/2 year highs on May 11 as the prospect of new U.S. sanctions on Iran tightened the outlook for Middle East supply at a time when global crude production is only just keeping pace with rising demand.
The U.S. plans to reintroduce sanctions against Iran, which pumps about 4% of the world’s oil, after abandoning a deal reached in late 2015 that limited Tehran’s nuclear ambitions in exchange for the removal of U.S. and European sanctions.
The global oil market is finely balanced, with top exporter Saudi Arabia and top producer Russia having led efforts to curb oil supply to prop up prices.
Benchmark Brent crude was down 20 cents at $77.27 a barrel by 8:30 a.m. CT. On May 10 Brent hit $78, its highest since November 2014.
U.S. light crude was down 10 cents at $71.26, having touched a 3-1/2 year high of $71.89 on May 10.
Many analysts expect oil prices to rise as Iran’s exports fall.
“The up-trend remains strong and intact,” Robin Bieber, technical chart analyst at London brokerage PVM Oil Associates, said.
Rainer Seele, CEO of Austrian oil and gas company OMV, told German daily Handelsblatt that he expects prices to rise as the U.S. moves to reimpose sanctions.
“It is not yet clear which concrete sanctions the U.S. will impose. But I expect the price of North Sea Brent to be closer to $80 than $70 a barrel,” Seele said in an interview.
U.S. investment bank Jefferies said in a note on May 11 that it expects Iranian crude oil exports to start falling in the next few months.
“We expect that around October Iranian exports will be down by 500,000 barrels per day and eventually fall by 1 million barrels per day,” the bank said.
There are signs, however, that other members of OPEC will raise output to counter the Iran disruption.
Jefferies said that OPEC has the capacity “to replace the Iranian losses” but added “even if physical supply is held constant ... the market will still be faced with a precariously low level of spare capacity.”
Outside OPEC, soaring U.S. crude oil production could help to fill Iran’s supply gap. U.S. oil output reached another record high last week, hitting 10.7 MMbbl/d.
That is up 27% since mid-2016 and means that U.S. output is creeping ever closer to that of top producer Russia, which pumps about 11 MMbbl/d.
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