Crude oil stands at  as tankers head to Hormuz after four months of chaos
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Crude oil stands at $75 as tankers head to Hormuz after four months of chaos
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Crude oil prices edged lower on Friday as concerns over supply disruptions eased with more oil tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Around 7 am IST, Brent crude was trading at $74.95 a barrel, down 31 cents or 0.41%, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude fell 32 cents, or 0.44%, to $71.60 a barrel.The decline came despite fresh tensions in the region. Earlier on Thursday, oil prices had jumped more than 2% after a cargo ship near Oman was hit by an unidentified projectile. Following the incident, the United Nations’ shipping agency suspended its voluntary evacuation programme.Two US officials told Reuters that Iran fired at the vessel as it tried to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian authorities said the safety of ships travelling outside designated routes in the strait could not be guaranteed.“With the geopolitical risk premium once again creeping back into prices, markets will be watching intently to see if tanker traffic resumes or if these latest hurdles force producers to tap the brakes on planned production increases,” said IG analyst Tony Sycamore.Despite Thursday’s gains, both Brent and WTI crude are on track to post weekly losses of about 7%.Meanwhile, data released on Thursday showed that crude shipments through the Strait of Hormuz rose this week to their highest level since the US-Israeli conflict with Iran began in February. The increase followed a ceasefire agreement that reopened the key shipping route.However, traffic through the strait remains much lower than normal. Before the conflict began on February 28, around 125 ships passed through the waterway every day.Earthquakes in Venezuela also raised concerns about oil supplies. Initial inspections showed limited damage to the country’s oil and gas infrastructure, as major production regions, refineries, pipelines and terminals were located away from the worst-hit areas.However, sources said power outages could affect Venezuela’s ability to maintain oil production at its pre-earthquake level of nearly 1.2 million barrels per day.Since the US-Iran conflict began back on February 28, oil prices have continued to skyrocket, even breaching the $126 per barrel mark. Now, as the two countries have reached a peace conclusion, prices have soothed, falling to lowest levels in the past 4 months, near pre-war levels.

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