Oil prices jumped on Friday after the latest round of nuclear talks between the United States and Iran ended without a deal. The two countries held discussions in Geneva on Thursday, and while no agreement was reached, both sides said talks would continue.
Brent crude futures rose to $72.54 a barrel, up 2.4% on the day. West Texas Intermediate climbed 2.6% to $66.89 a barrel.
Brent Crude Oil Last Day Financ (BZ=F)
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi described the Geneva session as one of the “most serious and longest rounds of negotiations” held between the two sides. He said “good progress” was made during the talks.
Oil prices have swung sharply in the past 24 hours. Traders are balancing the possibility of a diplomatic deal against the risk of US military action, either of which would affect global oil supply.
Energy stocks gained on the back of rising oil prices. Exxon rose 1.1% in premarket trading and Chevron was up 0.8%. ConocoPhillips added 0.6%.
The moves reflect investor sensitivity to any developments in the Middle East that could disrupt oil production or shipping routes.
Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, noted that mixed signals from both sides kept traders cautious despite the hint of progress. He said attention is now turning to Sunday’s OPEC+ supply meeting.
Concerns about an emerging oil glut are hanging over the market ahead of the OPEC+ gathering. The group is expected to discuss output levels, and any decision to increase supply could weigh on prices.
That tension between geopolitical risk and potential oversupply is keeping oil markets volatile. Prices remain sensitive to any new developments from either the Iran talks or the OPEC+ meeting.
As of Friday morning, Brent crude was trading at $71.36 a barrel and West Texas Intermediate was at $65.82, reflecting a slight pullback from earlier highs but still well above Thursday’s close.
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