
Oil rises as investors weigh market outlook, tariffs, sanctions
Brent crude futures were up 76 cents, or 1.11%, at $69.40 a barrel as of 1153 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude ticked up 82 cents, or 1.23%, to $67.39 a barrel.
At those levels, Brent was headed for a 1.6% gain on the week, while WTI was up around 0.6% from last week's close.
The IEA said on Friday the global oil market may be tighter than it appears, with demand supported by peak summer refinery runs to meet travel and power-generation.
Front-month September Brent contracts were trading at a $1.11 premium to October futures at 1153 GMT.
'Civilians, be they in the air or on the road, are showing a healthy willingness to travel,' PVM analyst John Evans said in a note on Friday.
Prompt tightness notwithstanding, the IEA boosted its forecast for supply growth this year, while trimming its outlook for growth in demand, implying a market in surplus.
'OPEC+ will quickly and significantly turn up the oil tap. There is a threat of significant oversupply. In the short term, however, oil prices remain supported,' Commerzbank analysts said in a note.
Further adding support to the short-term outlook, Russian deputy prime minister Alexander Novak said on Friday that Russia will compensate for overproduction against its OPEC+ quota this year in August-September.
One other sign of robust prompt oil demand was the prospect of Saudi Arabia shipping about 51 million barrels of crude oil in August to China, the biggest such shipment in over two years.
Longer term, however, rival forecasting agency OPEC cut its forecasts for global oil demand in 2026 to 2029 because of slowing Chinese demand, the group said in its 2025 World Oil Outlook published on Thursday.
Both benchmark futures contracts lost more than 2% on Thursday as investors worried about the impact of Trump's evolving tariff policy on global economic growth and oil demand.
'Prices have recouped some of this decline after President Trump said he plans to make a 'major' statement on Russia on Monday. This could leave the market nervous over the potential for further sanctions on Russia,' ING analysts wrote in a client note.
Trump has expressed frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin due to the lack of progress on peace with Ukraine and Russia's intensifying bombardment of Ukrainian cities.
The European Commission is set to propose a floating Russian oil price cap this week as part of a new draft sanctions package, but Russia said it has 'good experience' of tackling and minimising such challenges.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
5 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Gulf markets mixed as strong earnings offset US tariff concerns
Stock markets in the Gulf ended mixed on Monday, as investors weighed positive corporate earnings against concerns over U.S. trade policy changes. The European Union is exploring broader counter-measures against the U.S. as prospects of an acceptable trade agreement with Washington fade, according to EU diplomats. Investors had been hoping for some progress in trade talks ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's August 1 tariff deadline; Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is still confident a deal could be reached with the EU. Saudi Arabia's benchmark index gained 0.2%, ending a nine-day losing streak, led by a 1.6% gain in sharia-compliantlender Al Rajhi Bank and a 1.2% increase in Saudi National Bank, as the duo reported a rise in quarterly net profit. But International Petrochemical Company declined 5.7%, after the firm turned to losses in the second quarter. If upcoming earnings reports are broadly positive, the market may rebound, Osama Al Saifi, managing director for MENA at Traze, said. Dubai's main share index dropped 0.8%, easing from a multi-year high, hit by a 3.7% slide in top lender Emirates NBD. Profit-taking weighed on the market, with noticeable pressure on the financial sector, Saifi said. Most Gulf stocks slip on US tariff worries 'Investors could secure their profits after a long period of strong momentum ahead of the Q2 earnings releases.' Air Arabia leapt 4.8% to a fresh record high after securing a bid to operate a new Saudi low-cost national airline, set to launch by 2030. In Abu Dhabi, the index fell 0.2%. Oil prices dipped slightly, with the latest European sanctions on Russian oil expected to have minimal impact on supplies while U.S. tariffs ensure demand concerns remain. The Qatari index closed 0.7% higher, with the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank gaining 1.5%. Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index edged 0.2% higher, hitting a new record high. ----------------------------------------- SAUDI ARABIA rose 0.2% to 10,981 Abu Dhabi fell 0.2% to 10,262 Dubai dropped 0.8% to 6,045 QATAR gained 0.7% to 11,022 EGYPT added 0.2% to 34,130 BAHRAIN was down 0.3% to 1,938 OMAN rose 1.5% at 4,743 KUWAIT was up 0.1% to 9,302 -----------------------------------------


Business Recorder
5 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Robusta coffee falls on ample supplies, cocoa edges up
LONDON: Robusta coffee futures fell on Monday with newly harvested beans from Brazil and Indonesia ensuring that supplies remain ample while cocoa regained some ground after recent weakness. Coffee Robusta coffee lost 2.8% at $3,255 a metric ton by 1104 GMT. Dealers said the market was sliding back down towards a 16-month low of $3,186 set a week ago. They noted the market's main focus remained on whether the U.S. would go ahead with the planned 50% tariff on imports on Brazilian coffee from August 1. About a third of U.S. coffee comes from Brazil and the tariffs, if they transpire, would all but halt the flow of Brazilian beans to the U.S., the world's top coffee drinker. Arabica coffee lost 1.45% to $2.9920 per lb. Cocoa regains some ground, still set for weekly loss Cocoa London cocoa rose 1.1% to 5,020 pounds per ton in a modest rebound after falling by around 4% last week on bearish second quarter grind data. Dealers said second quarter grind from Asia, Europe and North America showed an overall decline of around 10%, reinforcing concerns that the rise in prices last year has curbed demand. Speculators cut net long positions in London cocoa and New York cocoa in the week to July 15. New York cocoa rose 1.85% to $7,944 a ton. Sugar Raw sugar lost 1.1% to 16.64 cents per lb. Dealers said early indications point to a potential global surplus in the 2025/26 season with a strong monsoon boosting production in India and Thailand. White sugar fell 0.9% to $483.50 a ton.


Business Recorder
5 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Corn and soybeans fall as rain seen helping US crops, wheat firm
HAMBURG: Chicago corn and soybean futures fell on Monday on forecasts for crop-friendly rain in U.S. grain belts this week. Wheat was firm as slow farmer selling of Russia's new crop could transfer export sales to the United States. Chicago Board of Trade most active corn was down 0.3% to $4.26-1/4 a bushel at 1130 GMT. Soybeans were down 0.6% to $10.29-1/2 a bushel, while wheat was up 0.3% to $5.48-1/4 a bushel. All three contracts remain close to multi-month or multi-year lows due to ample supply. Chicago corn futures rose on Friday on worries that excessive heat may threaten developing U.S. crops, but more showers are forecast in U.S. grain belts this week. 'Corn and soybeans are being weakened by forecasts of rain in the U.S., which is helping remove some of the fear seen on Friday about possible heat stress to U.S. crops,' said Matt Ammermann, StoneX commodity risk manager. 'Temperatures in U.S. corn and soybean production regions are still forecast to be high, but the combination of heat and rain may create a 'greenhouse' impact with optimal growing conditions.' Soybeans edge lower as plentiful supply stifles gains 'The USDA (U.S. Department of Agriculture) report on U.S. crops later today is likely to be stable or show improvements in crop conditions.' Soybeans were also weakened as soyoil prices dipped from life-of-contract highs last week. Smaller than expected Russian exports, despite the arrival of the new crop, were underpinning wheat. 'Wheat is being supported by late arrival of the Russian new crop with farmer selling still smaller than expected,' Ammermann said. 'It is still unclear whether the slow selling is because farmers are cash-rich and can hold out for higher prices, or is it because there is concern about Russian new crop quality and yields?' 'Reduced Russian export flows open the possibility of a transfer of export business to U.S. wheat, which is looking cheap in export markets.'