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Brent Oil Falls Below $28 after Iran Sanctions Lifted

Brent crude fell below $28 a barrel in Asia on Monday for the first time in more than 12 years on fears about a worsening supply glut after Western sanctions on Iran were lifted, allowing Tehran to resume oil exports.

Up to half a million barrels per day of Iranian crude could be added to already saturated markets after U.S. and European leaders ended a crippling embargo put in place over Tehran's nuclear program.

The news led to further selling of the black gold, which has fallen by about three quarters since mid-2014 owing to the supply glut, record output levels, weak demand and a slowing global economy.

Brent for March delivery tumbled to as low as $27.67, or by 4.4 percent from Friday's close, before rebounding to trade at above $28. The last time Brent closed below $28 was in November 2003.

At around 0600 GMT, the contract was trading 49 cents, or 1.69 percent, lower at 28.44. U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in February was down 41 cents, or 1.39 percent, at $29.01.

"The drop was due to the Western sanctions on Iran being lifted. This means we will be seeing a bigger oil glut with Iranian crude exports coming back to the market," said Phillip Futures analyst Daniel Ang.

He said prices rebounded on some bargain-buying.

The United States and European Union lifted the sanctions on Sunday after the UN's atomic watchdog confirmed that Iran had complied with its obligations under a landmark deal in July to curb Tehran's nuclear programme.

Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney, said that while Iranian oil could come in quickly, suppliers still needed to find buyers.

- Downward pressure -"Iran has quite a large storage of oil at the moment. They are in a position to sell that if they choose to do so and increase supply quite quickly," Spooner told Agence France Presse.

But "they've got to get the buyers and that's one of the key questions", he said.

"I think Iran's main priority is going to be re-establishing its customer base and re-establishing its market share. They will want to be doing good, sound, attractive deals for their customers."

Ang added that Iran is likely to sell first the oil it has in its storage facilities before considering to ramp up production.

"They were telling the market that they have quite a bit in storage. Over the longer term, I don't know how much more they can produce considering prices are so low," he told AFP.

Banking group ANZ said Iran is likely to offer discounts to entice buyers, leading to "further downward pressure on prices in the near-term".

Singapore's DBS Bank said in a research note that adjusted for inflation oil is now cheaper than at any time since 1998, at the height of the Asian financial crisis.

DBS said expectations are that exports from Iran will grow by 300,000 barrels per day in the short term and rise to 500,000 barrels per day by mid-year, which would more than offset a drop in U.S. production over the past six months.

Analysts expect supply to continue to outrun demand over the next two years, which would keep prices low.

DBS said that over the past 18 months, the United States had been responsible for more than half of supply growth. Saudi Arabia accounted for only 4.0 percent, while Iraq and Brazil contributed 38 percent.

"If supply growth were cut to zero today, demand would not catch up with supply until January 2018," DBS said.

"In the meantime, inventories would continue to grow and, at least from a fundamentals perspective, downward pressure on prices would remain."

Source: Agence France Presse


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