Categories: Energy

Oil prices drop amid resumption of Hormuz shipments

Oil prices sank 2% on Friday and were headed for steep ‌weekly losses amid easing supply concerns as more stranded oil tankers exited the Strait of Hormuz.

Brent crude futures fell $1.47, or 1.95%, to $73.79 a barrel as of 0421 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell $1.44, or ​2%, to $70.48 a barrel.

Refining giant Saudi Aramco resumed oil loading on Friday at its Ras Tanura terminal in ​the Gulf after a near four-month halt, shipping data from LSEG showed.

Two Very Large ⁠Crude Carriers were seen loading crude at the terminal, while another waited nearby. Each VLCC is ​capable of loading 2 million barrels of oil.

“There is a general selloff as the market reacts to the increased flows ​exiting the Strait of Hormuz and China not yet picking up crude demand,” said June Goh, senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities.

Both benchmark contracts jumped more than 2% on Thursday after a cargo vessel was hit by an unknown projectile near Oman, prompting the ​United Nations’ shipping agency to suspend its voluntary evacuation scheme.

Two United States officials told Reuters that Iran fired on the cargo ​ship as it attempted to pass through the strait. Iranian authorities said the security of vessels passing outside designated Hormuz routes is ‌not guaranteed.

Dangote refinery reduces petrol gantry price

Brent ⁠oil and WTI crude are both headed for losses of around 8% this week.

Data showed on Thursday that crude shipments through the Strait of Hormuz rose this week to their highest level since the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran began in February after a ceasefire deal reopened the waterway, while concerns about how long the strait would stay open also ​boosted trade.

However, overall traffic remains ​a fraction of the ⁠daily average of 125 ships passing through the strait before the February 28 conflict began.

“Much of the increase reflects previously stranded vessels leaving the Persian Gulf. Vessel flows into the ​Gulf remain much more modest. It suggests that once stranded vessels have moved out, ​we could see ⁠a pullback in flows,” ING analysts said in a statement.

Segun Ojo

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