Oil Prices Dip After Four-Day Rally Amid Iran Unrest

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Oil Prices Dip After Four-Day Rally Amid Iran Unrest

Oil prices dropped on Wednesday after posting their biggest four-day gain in over six months, as traders evaluated the U.S. response to the ongoing unrest in Iran.

Brent crude edged down toward $65 a barrel after surging more than 9% over the previous four sessions, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) slipped below $61, The Caspian Post reports, citing Bloomberg.

The market reaction comes as President Donald Trump urged Iranians to continue protesting against the government of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and stated he would “act accordingly” once he has a clearer sense of the number of demonstrators killed.

Trump suggested his next move would hinge on an upcoming meeting of the National Security Council. The body met Tuesday without Trump to prepare options for the president, the Washington Post reported, citing a person familiar with the meeting.

Traders are watching the unrest in Iran and possible American intervention, which could threaten the country’s roughly 3.3 million barrels-a-day oil output. Meanwhile, Energy Secretary Chris Wright told Fox News the US would “happily be a commercial partner” for Iranian crude if the regime fell.

Oil has pushed higher in the new year as the turmoil in OPEC’s fourth-largest producer, along with upheaval in Venezuela, reinserted a premium into prices following a run of five monthly losses spurred by expectations for a glut. The rally has caught off guard a market that had been steeped with bearish bets.

“The market remains caught between the reality of an ongoing oversupply and the escalation of geopolitical risks,” said Zhou Mi, an analyst at a research institute affiliated with Chaos Ternary Futures Co. “In the near term, developments in Iran could trigger another burst of price swings, and any US military action would likely drive oil prices higher.”

Brent’s second-month volatility was near the highest since June on Wednesday. Its prompt spread - the difference between its two nearest contracts - strengthened in a bullish backwardation structure compared with a month ago.

On the physical front, an industry report indicated US crude stockpiles rose 5.3 million barrels last week. That would be the biggest increase in two months if confirmed by official data later Wednesday. In addition, the snapshot from the American Petroleum Industry showed builds in gasoline and distillates.

In the Black Sea, meanwhile, two tankers were attacked near the terminal for the Caspian Pipeline Consortium. That’s complicated Kazakhstan’s exports, with planned shipments already affected by bad weather and mooring damage.

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Oil prices dropped on Wednesday after posting their biggest four-day gain in over six months, as traders evaluated the U.S. response to the ongoing unrest in Iran.