Oil slide deepens as Saudi exports reach 90% of pre-war level
Brent futures slipped to near $70 a barrel in London, hitting their lowest since the week before the Iran war began on Feb 28. Saudi Arabia managed to load crude at almost 90% of previous levels after restarting shipments late last week from its g...

Brent futures slipped to near $70 a barrel in London, hitting their lowest since the week before the Iran war began on Feb 28. Saudi Arabia managed to load crude at almost 90% of previous levels after restarting shipments late last week from its giant Ras Tanura terminal, according to vessel-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate dipped to near $67 a barrel.
The kingdom's rebound resembles that of its neighbor, the United Arab Emirates, which last month restored its oil exports to pre-conflict levels of more than 3.9 million barrels a day. A US official estimates that oil supply through the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint has now reached more than 10 million barrels a day.
The result has been a gush of oil into the market at a time when many of the wartime supply workarounds are still in place - including releases of emergency reserves and depressed imports by China. Brent futures are trading in a bearish contango price structure that signals short-term oversupply, with discounts on the closest contracts. Premiums for physical crude have also plunged in recent days.
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"A wave of oil is about to enter the market," said Natasha Kaneva, head of commodities research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. "And here lies the paradox. The surge in oil supply is about to collide with a market that, at least for now, simply does not need it."
Saudi Arabia has made the unusual move of selling millions of barrels on an ad-hoc basis to customers in Asia as it starts shipping its crude from inside the Persian Gulf again.
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Brent futures have continued to decline after their biggest quarterly drop since the pandemic in 2020, with a loss of more than 40% from their peak at the height of the war. Flows through Hormuz-which connects Persian Gulf producers to global buyers -continued despite tensions over the weekend, allaying fears of an oil-led inflationary spike. "The market is being flooded with crude oil," said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management. "Ample volumes of oil are putting pressure on the front end."
Progress on Peace Talks
Ceremonies are expected to begin July 4 and continue for days, according to Iranian state-run media.
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