Oil extends climb on fresh Iran sanctions, lower US crude stocks

By Georgina McCartney and Jeslyn Lerh

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Oil prices rose on Wednesday, extending the prior day’s gains, as investors weighed a fresh round of U.S. sanctions on Iran, a drop in U.S. crude stocks and a softer tone from President Donald Trump toward the Federal Reserve.

Brent crude futures climbed 55 cents, or 0.8%, to $67.99 a barrel at 0400 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 54 cents, or 0.9%, at $64.21 a barrel.

The U.S. issued new sanctions targeting Iranian liquefied petroleum gas and crude oil shipping magnate Seyed Asadoollah Emamjomeh and his corporate network on Tuesday.

Emamjomeh’s network is responsible for shipping hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of Iranian LPG and crude oil to foreign markets, the U.S. Treasury said in a statement.

“The U.S. issued fresh sanctions targeting Iranian energy supplies, which worried markets,” said senior market analyst Priyanka Sachdeva at Phillip Nova.

Both benchmark prices this morning were also backed by hope of positive turnout between the U.S. and China over import tariffs, Sachdeva said.

Trump on Tuesday backed off from the notion of firing Fed Chair Jerome Powell after days of intensifying criticism for not cutting interest rates. Trump also signalled the possibility of lower tariffs on Chinese imports.

Meanwhile, U.S. crude oil inventories fell by around 4.6 million barrels last week, market sources said on Tuesday citing American Petroleum Institute data. [API/S]

U.S. government data on oil stockpiles is due at 10:30 a.m. ET (1430 GMT) on Wednesday. Analysts on average estimated an 800,000 barrel decline in U.S. crude oil stocks last week, a Reuters poll showed. [EIA/S]

Trump told reporters on Tuesday he would be “nice” in negotiations with China and that tariffs would fall significantly following a deal, but not to zero.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he believed there will be de-escalation in Sino-U.S. trade tension but that negotiations have not yet started and would be a “slog”, a person who heard his closed-door presentation to investors at a JP Morgan conference told Reuters.

Trade tariffs have weighed on crude futures on investor concern about their potential to slow global economic growth.

(Reporting by Georgina McCartney in Houston and Jeslyn Lerh in Singapore; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Christopher Cushing)

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