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Oil Extends Rally as Market Focuses on Hormuz Disruption

  • Benchmarks on multi-day rally amid Strait of Hormuz closure
  • UAE's exit unlikely to boost near-term supply, analysts say
  • US to extend Iran port blockade, WSJ says
  • US crude, gasoline, distillate inventories fall for second week

BEIJING/SINGAPORE, April 29 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Wednesday, extending a multi-day rally, on media reports the ‌U.S. will extend its blockade of Iranian ports, likely prolonging supply disruptions from the key Middle East producing region.

U.S. President Donald Trump has instructed aides to prepare for an extended blockade of Iran, the Wall Street Journal reported late on Tuesday, citing U.S. officials.

Trump will opt ​to continue to squeeze Iran's economy and oil exports by preventing shipping to and from its ports, the ​report said.

Brent crude futures for June rose $1.11, or 1%, to $112.37 a barrel at 0647 GMT, ⁠climbing for an eighth day. The June contract expires on Thursday and the more active July contract was at $105.32, up ​0.88%.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures for June CLc1 rose 51 cents, or 0.51%, to $100.44 a barrel after gaining 3.7% in ​the previous session, climbing for seven out of the last eight days.

"The recent rise in oil prices has been driven by the Strait blockade. If Trump is prepared to extend the blockade, supply disruptions would worsen further and continue to push oil prices higher," said Yang ​An, an analyst at Haitong Futures.

Investors were also assessing the ramifications of the United Arab Emirates' surprise decision to quit ​OPEC.

Analysts did not expect any major near-term impact on the market by the move.

There must be a resolution in the Persian Gulf ‌that allows ⁠for uninhibited energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz once again before UAE's output increase to realise, ING analysts wrote in a note on Wednesday.

They said in the medium to longer term the UAE's decision means more supply for the market, which suggests that the Brent forward curve should move into deeper backwardation.

Despite a ceasefire in the U.S.-Israeli war with ​Iran, the conflict is deadlocked as ​both sides seek a ⁠formal end to the fighting.

Iran has shut the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for about 20% of global oil and LNG supplies, and the United States blockaded Iranian ports.

The U.S. ​is pressing Iran to end what it says is a nuclear weapons programme, while Iran ​wants some form ⁠of reparations for the latest round of fighting, an easing of economic sanctions and some form of control over the Strait of Hormuz.

The Hormuz shutdown is prompting pulls from global inventories, with market sources saying late on Tuesday the American Petroleum Institute ⁠reported U.S. ​crude oil inventories fell for a second week.

Crude stocks fell by ​1.79 million barrels in the week ended April 24, the sources said. Gasoline inventories fell by 8.47 million barrels, while distillate inventories fell by 2.60 ​million barrels.

Reporting by Sam Li in Beijing and Siyi Liu in Singapore; Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Clarence Fernandez and Jane Merriman

Source: Reuters


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