Oil prices tumble 3% on potential for US-Iran deal and higher inventories
Oil prices slid more than 3% on Thursday morning, amid expectations of a potential nuclear deal between the US and Iran.
Brent crude futures (BZ=F) dropped 3% to $64.08 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate futures (CL=F) fell 3.5% to $60.92 a barrel.
In an interview with NBC News on Wednesday, Ali Shamkhani, a top adviser to Iran's supreme leader, said that Iran was ready to sign a nuclear deal with the US with certain conditions.
In exchange for an immediate lifting of economic sanctions on Iran, Shamkhani reportedly said that Iran would commit to never making nuclear weapons and would agree to dispose of its stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, as well as to enrich uranium to levels only needed for civilian use and allow inspectors to supervise this process.
Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: Stocks lower despite UK economy growing more than expected
The comments came just hours after US president Donald Trump said that he wanted to make a deal with Iran but added that it must "permanently and verifiably cease pursuit of nuclear weapons", speaking during his visit to the Middle East.
The US on Tuesday imposed fresh sanctions on companies that it said had been sending Iranian oil to China.
Meanwhile, data released by the US Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed that US crude stockpiles increased by 3.5 million barrels to 441.8 million barrels last week. That was much higher than an increase of 1.1 million barrels anticipated by analysts polled by Reuters.
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "Falling oil prices have put pressure on listed energy giants, as concerns about oversupply in the market swirl.
"Just as traders were processing data that showed a big surge in US crude stockpiles, the potential for a US-Iran deal is increasing forecasts of a glut in global oil supplies," she said.
"BP (BP.L) has fallen by more than 4% and Shell (SHEL.L) is down 2.7% in early trade as lower oil prices weigh on their valuations."
Gold prices also fell on Thursday, amid continued investor optimism around easing trade tensions.
Gold futures (GC=F) declined 1.2% to $3,150.40 per ounce on Tuesday morning, while the spot gold price fell 0.9% to $3,148.39 per ounce at the time of writing.
News that at the start of the week that the US and China had agreed to cut tariffs on each other's imports by 115% for 90 days dented the appeal of gold as a safe-haven asset.
This de-escalation of trade tensions has boosted investors' outlook for the economy and led to expectations that the US Federal Reserve make fewer interest rate cuts than previously expected.
Read more: UK economy grows 0.7% in first quarter of the year
In turn, this prompted a sell-off in US Treasurys, pushing yields — which are effectively the interest rates on these debt instruments — higher.
Jim Reid, market strategist at Deutsche Bank (DBK.DE), said: "The bond sell-off came amid an ongoing reversal in Fed rate cut expectations, with fed funds futures moving to price less than two cuts by year-end for the first time since February.
"That came as Fed speakers struck a measured tone, with San Francisco Fed president Daly saying that 'the word of the day is patience' while Chicago Fed president Goolsbee said that a 'solid hard data economy is still there' beneath the recent noise."
Higher bond yields tend to weigh on gold prices, given that the precious metal is a non-yielding asset.
The pound edged higher against the dollar (GBPUSD=X) in early European trading, up 0.2% to trade at $1.3286, following data that showed better-than-expected UK economic growth.
According to the Office for National Statistics, the UK's gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.7% in the first quarter of 2025, which was ahead of market estimates of 0.6%. This was also a marked improvement of the 0.1% growth recorded over Christmas.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said: "There's no question that the economy looks a whole lot more robust than many people had expected considering the gloom that permeated perception in the wake of last year's budget.
'Growth has been resilient and significant despite concerns about the impact of increased employment costs and uncertainty linked to Donald Trump's tariffs. Whilst not quite matching last year's first quarter, it has come in way above what had been expected."
Stocks: Create your watchlist and portfolio
Meanwhile, the pound was little changed against the euro (GBPEUR=X), which was trading at €1.1858 at the time of writing.
More broadly, the FTSE 100 (^FTSE) was down 0.2% at 8,569 points. For more details, check our live coverage here.
Read more:
Savers making costly 'bad decisions' around pensions as 15 million risk retirement poverty
UK pay growth slows as job market cools amid uncertainty
Pension funds deal to back £50bn of investment for UK private markets and infrastructure
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Online broker Tiger to double Hong Kong headcount, targets offshore China wealth
By Selena Li HONG KONG (Reuters) -Tiger Securities plans to double its headcount in Hong Kong over the next two to three years as the online brokerage targets a bigger share of the growing offshore Chinese wealth in the financial hub, its chief executive said. The Singapore-headquartered firm, founded in 2014 in Beijing, currently employs 60 people in Hong Kong, where it started operations in late 2022, founder and CEO Tinahua Wu told Reuters late Monday. "Hong Kong is a very important global financial centre and it's not only about the several million local residents," Wu said. Tiger's parent firm UP Fintech Holding listed in the U.S. in 2019. "It is because it's backed by China," the 40-year-old former tech veteran said, adding growing accumulation of Chinese wealth offshore needs investment services. Securities trading activities have risen in the offshore Chinese market since Beijing started to unveil a slew of stimulus last September, a trend which has not been dampened by the global trade tensions, according to Wu. Mainland investors have poured HK$651 billion ($83 billion) into Hong Kong-listed shares via the Southbound Stock Connect so far this year, more than double the HK$283 billion during the same period last year, CICC analysts said in a note on Tuesday. The capital inflows augurs well for local brokerages closely connected to clients in China, the world's second-largest economy, at a time when U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war weighs on investor appetite for U.S. assets. The buoyant Hong Kong market has attracted some companies such as Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group to foray into Hong Kong by acquiring a 50.55% stake in local broker Bright Smart in April. As more Chinese high-net worth individuals set up family offices in Hong Kong and domestic companies increasingly seek to expand offshore, Wu said Tiger expects sizable growth in demand from both individual and corporate clients. Tiger holds more than $50 billion worth of assets globally and operates in markets beyond Hong Kong, including the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore. The brokerage's assets under custody, a key measure of client holdings in Tiger's Hong Kong accounts, quadrupled in the first quarter of 2025 from the same period last year, according to UP Fintech's first quarter report. Strong pipeline of initial public listings in Hong Kong with "star" Chinese firms coming to raise funds in the city has also resulted in heightened interest in buying and trading new shares, he said. ($1 = 7.8435 Hong Kong dollars) Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Airbus deliveries fell 4% in May, sources say
NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Airbus delivered around 51 airplanes in May, industry sources said, down 4% from the same month last year. The tally brings deliveries so far this year to around 243 aircraft, down 5% from the first five months of 2024. Airbus declined comment ahead of a monthly performance bulletin on June 5. The world's largest planemaker faces growing pressure from airlines over delays in deliveries as it aims for a 7% increase in handovers to customers for the full year to 820 aircraft. Airlines holding their annual gathering in New Delhi this week criticised manufacturers for supply problems that have persisted for several years since the pandemic, with the head of Saudi budget carrier flyadeal calling delays "inexcusable". Airbus has said it expects the delays, caused in part by slow arrivals of engines, to stabilise during the summer.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
China car dealers urge automakers to stop dumping inventory on them
BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese auto dealers on Tuesday called on automakers to stop offloading too many cars on dealerships, as intense price wars are pressuring their cash flow, driving down their profitability and forcing some to shut. The proposal came on the heels of an official call over the weekend for the auto industry to halt bruising price wars. Conditions facing car dealers have become "even more severe" amid a new round of hefty discounting since the second quarter, the China Auto Dealers Chamber of Commerce said in a statement. Automakers should set reasonable annual production and sales targets and should not transfer inventory to dealers and force them to stockpile cars, the chamber proposed on Tuesday. The cycle of payments to dealers should be shortened and dealers "shall not be coerced to withdraw from the network and close their stores in the name of optimising network channels," it said. A large dealer of Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD's cars in the eastern province of Shandong went out of business with at least 20 of its stores found to be deserted or shut, local media reported last week. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data