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Oil Rises on US-Iran Strikes; Gains Capped by Shipping Hopes

  • US and Iran agree to resume talks over Strait of Hormuz
  • Middle East producers press ahead with loadings
  • Brent crude fell 10.6% last week

LONDON, June 29 (Reuters) - Oil rose more than 1% on Monday after attacks by the ‌U.S. and Iran underscored the fragility of their interim peace deal, while expectations of a continued recovery in energy shipping through the Strait of Hormuz limited gains.

Iran and the U.S. agreed ​to renew talks over the strait, raising hopes of saving the ​peace deal that had been threatened by days of tit-for-tat strikes.

Brent ⁠crude futures were up 77 cents, or around 1.1%, at $72.76 a barrel by ​1324 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude gained $1, or 1.44%, to $70.23.

"A war premium ​could remain present until the situation in the Middle East calms down completely, generating fewer headlines," said Achilleas Georgolopoulos, analyst at broker XM.

Brent crude fell 10.6% last week in a third consecutive ​weekly decline after crude shipments through the strait rose to their highest since the ​U.S.-Israeli war on Iran began in late February.

"There's still plenty of risk facing the oil ‌market. ⁠Even so, participants appear to be... focusing on what a continued recovery in oil flows would mean for the global balance," ING analysts said in a note on Monday.

"This complacency is odd and clearly leaves significant upside risk if the ​supply recovery proves slow."

Middle ​East producers are ⁠pushing ahead with loading oil and LNG despite fresh ship attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and renewed strikes between ​the U.S. and Iran in recent days, shipping data showed.

Saudi ​oil giant ⁠Aramco resumed crude oil loadings on Friday at its Ras Tanura terminal, west of the Strait of Hormuz, after they were halted for nearly four months.

Loadings continued even ⁠after a helicopter ​belonging to the company crashed on Sunday ​at Ras Tanura, killing 14 nationals. The cause of the crash was unknown.

Reporting by Alex Lawler; Additional ​reporting by Florence Tan and Sudarshan Varadhan; Editing by David Goodman and Jan Harvey

Source: Reuters


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