WTI settles at the highest since 2018

Big week for oil

WTI settled up 81-cents to $69.62 today. That’s the highest settlement since 2018 and the intraday high of $69.76 was also the highest since then.

On the week, oil gained nearly 5% despite continued concerns about coronavirus and OPEC+ offering no surprises. The tailwind appeared to be Iran with nuclear talks failing to get over the finish line. They will resume on Wednesday so there are risks ahead but they’re two way. A deal is mostly priced in but there’s clearly some kind of last-minute sticking point. But if they don’t happen this week, they’ll surely be suspended until after the June 18 election.

Politico reports:

Negotiators have produced at least 20 pages of text with various options
on how to solve the remaining hurdles. Among them are a dispute over
how to handle Iran’s advanced centrifuges, the machines used to enrich
uranium, as well a disagreement over whether inspectors have sufficient
access to Iran’s nuclear sites. The U.S. and European powers are also
pushing to include a mention of follow-on talks that would address
Iran’s ballistic missile program and broader regional behavior.

Meanwhile, Iran wants guarantees the U.S. won’t abandon the deal –
again. The agreement has been on life support since former U.S.
President Donald Trump pulled out in 2018.

How much of a barrier these disputes pose to a final agreement seems to depend on who’s talking.

Enrique Mora, the European Union official overseeing the
negotiations, told reporters on Wednesday he was “sure” a deal would be
struck at the next round of talks, expected to start on June 10.

Ned Price, the spokesman for the U.S. State Department, said on Thursday
that the U.S. was “clear-eyed about its objectives” and that “there’s
just about every expectation there will be subsequent rounds” beyond the
upcoming sixth round, contradicting Mora’s more optimistic outlook.

Goldman Sachs has an interesting take on what will happen if there is a deal. They say it will lead to higher oil prices because it will remove some uncertainty that’s holding the market back.

“If that announcement comes in the next few weeks, in our view, it
actually starts that bullish repricing,” said Goldman senior commodity strategist Damien Courvalin.

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