Iran nuke deal could push oil prices lower
NEW YORK - Oil prices could be headed lower after the preliminary nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers, even though it does not loosen sanctions on Iran's oil exports.
In the short term, the deal may make
it easier for Iran to sell the oil it is already allowed to sell under the
sanctions, which would increase supplies on the world market. And the newfound
cooperation between Iran and the West eases tensions that pushed oil prices
higher in recent years.
But the deal,
"The initial reaction is going to be a more stable oil market," says Anthony Cordesman, a Middle East and energy expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "But everything will depend on if there's a final agreement and how it is implemented."
Iran reached an agreement Sunday with
the U.S. and five other world powers to freeze its nuclear program for six
months while the two sides work on a more permanent deal covering Iran's
development of nuclear technology. In exchange, some sanctions against Iran
will be relieved, and it will get access to some frozen overseas assets, including
$4.2 billion in oil revenue.
Kevin Book, an analyst at ClearView
Energy Partners in Washington, predicts the price of Brent Crude, an
international benchmark used to price oil used by many U.S. refineries, could
fall to $90 a barrel by the end of next year if talks yield a final agreement.
That's 17 percent below Brent's level early Monday when it fell $2.24 to
$108.81 a barrel.
Analysts caution, though, that if
talks on a final deal fall apart -- or even appear to be faltering -- oil could
instead rocket higher. Iran and the West have been seemingly close to an
agreement on nuclear issues in the past, only to abandon talks and descend
deeper into acrimony.
"Even the slightest hint of an
unraveling of the Geneva accord could restore a vibrant risk premium to
crude," Book says.
But oil prices appear to be headed
lower for now, in part because the prospect of more Iranian oil is coming at a
time when production is rising in the U.S., Canada, and elsewhere, helping
global supply growth outpace the growth in demand. The average price of Brent
crude so far this year is 3 percent below last year's average, and it's on
track for its lowest average price since 2010.
Lower prices of Brent crude have
helped reduced U.S. retail gasoline prices this year, which are also on track
for their lowest annual average since 2010. A further reduction in oil prices
could bring additional relief to drivers.
"The perception, whether accurate
or not, that next year's surplus could be supplemented by additional Iranian
barrels will be bearish for prices," says Judith Dwarkin, director of
energy research at ITG Investment Research.
Iran produces 2.7 million barrels of
oil per day, 3 percent of world demand that averages 91 million barrels per
day. Iran was once the world's third
largest oil exporter, but since 2012, when Western nations expanded economic
sanctions against the country to include oil, its exports have dropped 60
percent to less than 1 million barrels per day. Limited exports were allowed to
continue to some countries, especially in Asia, that rely on Iranian crude.
This weekend's preliminary deal does
not change those sanctions, which the White House says cost Iran up to $5
billion per month. The deal, the White House says, allows "purchases of
Iranian oil to remain at their currently significantly reduced levels."
But the Geneva deal may make it easier
for Iran to sell the oil allowed under the sanctions. ClearView's Book
estimates that Iran could increase sales by about 285,000 barrels per day over the
next month before reaching the 1 million barrel per day limit allowed by the
sanctions.
While modest, that could help lower
global prices by making up for a sharp drop in Libyan crude exports in recent
months caused by civil unrest.
The simple fact that the two sides
reached any agreement at all will also help reduce prices. Oil has been more
expensive in recent years in part because traders worried that the heightened
tensions between Iran and the West would lead to a sudden interruption of oil
supplies. Iran in the past has threated to block or attack oil shipments
through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage in the Persian Gulf through
which one-fifth of the world's oil passes.
Also, traders worried that the West
would further tighten limits on Iran's oil exports. While those limits won't be
loosening soon, the threat of even less Iranian oil on the world market has all
but evaporated -- for now.