SINGAPORE — Oil prices rose on Monday (June 22) after shipping through the Strait of Hormuz slowed while talks between US and Iranian officials in their first meeting under an interim peace deal were off to a bumpy start.
Brent crude futures climbed 54 cents or 0.67 per cent, to US$81.11 (S$105) a barrel by 12.30am GMT (8.30 am SGT), after touching a high of US$82.30 at the start of trading.
US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were at US$78.62 a barrel, up US$2.02, or 2.64 per cent ahead of the contract's expiry later on Monday.
The more active August contract rose US$1.43 to US$77.28 a barrel.
There was no settlement in the US market on Friday due to a holiday.
The number of ships that passed the Strait of Hormuz fell sharply on Sunday after Iran announced it had again closed the waterway, citing Israeli and US violations of the interim peace deal, shipping data showed.
"The market's expectation of the opening of the Strait has been premature," MST Marquee head of energy research Saul Kavonic said.
"Iran is likely to continue to find pretexts to stymie flows through the Strait, as that remains their only point of leverage into the mid-terms which they are unlikely to let go of."
US President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran even as US Vice President JD Vance met Iranian officials on Sunday for the first talks under an interim peace deal, while Tehran said the US had failed to meet its commitment to halt fighting in Lebanon.
Israeli strikes in Lebanon killed at least 20 people on Saturday, Lebanon's state news agency NNA said, one day after a ceasefire with Hezbollah took effect, aimed at halting months of escalating violence.
"The situation in Lebanon continues to pose a serious ongoing threat to both the ceasefire and the reopening of the Strait," IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said in a note.
Still, oil prices fell more than eight per cent last week on expectations of more supply from the release of cargoes stranded inside the Gulf and the potential lifting of US sanctions on Iranian oil as part of the US-Iran deal.
Over 25 million barrels of Iranian oil have passed through the virtual blockade line since Monday, the head of the National Iranian Oil Company, Hamid Bovard, told state TV on Sunday.
The UAE, Kuwait and Iraq have offered more oil to customers in the past week.
Iraq plans to restore crude oil production gradually to between 4.2 million and 4.3 million barrels per day, Iraq's deputy oil minister for upstream affairs said in a statement on Sunday.
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