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Brent oil gains 2% as US military strikes on Iran add to uncertainty on potential peace deal | Collector
Brent oil gains 2% as US military strikes on Iran add to uncertainty on potential peace deal
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Brent oil gains 2% as US military strikes on Iran add to uncertainty on potential peace deal

SINGAPORE: Brent crude futures rose over 2% in Asian trade on Tuesday after the U.S. military carried out strikes in Iran, keeping markets on edge ​as a deal to end the war and open up the Strait of Hormuz remained ‌elusive. Brent futures were up $1.98, or 2.1%, to $98.12 a barrel as of 0405 GMT, after settling 7% lower in the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $91.79 a barrel, up slightly from Monday’s last traded price but down $4.81, or 5%, from Friday’s close. There was no settlement on Monday due to the ​U.S. Memorial Day holiday. While both contracts fell during the overnight session on hopes of a peace ​deal, the U.S. strikes in southern Iran and Israeli attacks on Hezbollah have boosted Brent ⁠prices and widened the spread with WTI, said Michael McCarthy, CEO of online trading platform Moomoo Australia. U.S. ​Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Tuesday that negotiating a deal with Iran could “take a few days,” quashing hopes ​for an imminent end to the conflict a day after U.S. forces conducted what Washington called defensive strikes in southern Iran. Tehran has effectively halted nearly all non-Iranian shipping into and out of the Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz since the war began, choking ​off about a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows. The strikes happened as Iran’s top negotiator and ​its foreign minister were in Doha for talks with Qatar’s prime minister on a potential deal with the U.S. to end the ‌three-month-old ⁠war. Both Washington and Tehran said they have made progress on a memorandum of understanding that would halt the war and give negotiators 60 days to reach a final deal. Nikkei reported, citing a Middle East diplomatic source, that Iran would clear mines from the strait within a 30‑day window under the agreement, after which vessels from all countries could ​navigate freely and safely, ​with Tehran also ending ⁠transit fee collection. “Traders are betting heavily that a breakthrough will finally free up the long-paralyzed tankers stuck in and around the Strait of Hormuz,” said Tim Waterer, chief ​market analyst at KCM Trade. Ship-tracking data showed that three liquefied natural gas tankers passed ​through the strait ⁠in recent days, heading to Pakistan, China and India, along with a supertanker carrying Iraqi crude to China that had been stranded for nearly three months. U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday repeated his demand that Iran hand over its ⁠enriched uranium ​so it could be destroyed. “It’s a sharp reminder that the deal ​could still collapse at the eleventh hour, much like the five previous attempts before it,” said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG.

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