2026-02-03T05:14:19+00:00

    font

    Shafaq News

    Oil prices fell on Tuesday, easing for a second day, as
    market participants weighed the possibility of a de-escalation in U.S.-Iran
    tensions, while a firmer dollar placed greater downside pressure on prices.

    Brent crude futures fell 39 cents, or 0.5%, at $65.91 per
    barrel at 0330 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $61.83 per
    barrel, down 31 cents, or 0.5%.

    Oil prices fell more than 4% on Monday after U.S. President
    Donald Trump said Iran was “seriously talking” with Washington,
    signaling a de-escalation of tensions with the OPEC member.

    Iran and the U.S. are expected to resume nuclear talks on
    Friday in Turkey, officials from both sides told Reuters on Monday, and Trump
    warned that with big U.S. warships heading to Iran, bad things could happen if
    a deal was not reached.

    “The sharp up-and-down moves in oil prices over the
    last few sessions look more like sentiment-driven trading rather than any major
    shift in fundamentals,” said Phillip Nova senior market analyst Priyanka
    Sachdeva. “After last week’s rally, markets quickly gave back gains as
    broader risk assets also turned volatile.”

    “With no fresh escalation on the geopolitical front and
    macro data still mixed, oil clearly failed to hold onto gains.”

    Weighing on prices further, the U.S. dollar index hovered
    near a high of more than a week. A stronger greenback hurts demand for
    dollar-denominated crude from foreign buyers.

    “The continued recovery in the US dollar yesterday,
    following President Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal
    Reserve chair, also exerted downward pressure on oil prices,” ING analysts
    said in a note.

    On the trade front, Trump on Monday unveiled a deal with
    India that slashes U.S. tariffs on Indian goods to 18% from 50% in exchange for
    India halting Russian oil purchases and lowering trade barriers.

    “Overnight, the US and India agreed on a trade deal …
    if we do see this happen, it will only lead to a further increase in the amount
    of Russian oil floating at sea,” the ING analysts said.

    Trump announced the deal on social media following a call
    with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, noting that India had agreed to buy
    oil from the U.S. and possibly Venezuela.

    Some analysts said they were expecting volatile price
    movements this month.

    “Looking ahead into February, prices are likely to
    remain choppy and range-bound … (they) are expected to stay highly reactive
    to headlines and macro cues rather than a decisive trend, with risk skewed to
    the downside,” said Phillip Nova’s Sachdeva.

    (Reuters)

    Only the headline is edited by Shafaq News Agency.

    Share.

    Comments are closed.