Oil prices teeter above 100 dollars as US temporarily loosens Russian sanctions


Oil prices have climbed back above 100 dollars a barrel and global stock markets continue to slump, as the US said it had temporarily loosened sanctions on Russian oil to โ€œpromote stabilityโ€ in global energy markets.

The price of Brent crude oil was rising by about 0.5% on Friday morning to surpass the 100 dollar a barrel mark.

The International Energy Agency said on Thursday the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz had reduced to โ€œa trickleโ€ and it warned the war in Iran was causing the โ€œlargest supply disruption in the history of the global oil marketโ€.

This was despite the 32-nation alliance agreeing to release a record 400 million barrels of reserves to help curb a potential supply shortage.

Meanwhile, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent said America was temporarily allowing โ€œpermit countriesโ€ to purchase Russian oil currently in transit, in a bid to โ€œpromote stability in global energy marketsโ€ and โ€œkeep prices lowโ€.

He insisted the short-term measure would โ€œnot provide significant financial benefit to the Russian governmentโ€.

Mr Bessent also spoke about a 30-day waiver on Indian refiners who had been prevented from buying Russian oil.

โ€œI think itโ€™s an inevitability and thatโ€™s why we give a 30-day waiver because Russian barrels are on the water and it is a quick source for the Indian refineries,โ€ he told Skyโ€™s Wilfred Frost on the Master Investor Podcast.

โ€œIt is unfortunate and we hope that it will be a micro period that they will benefit.โ€

European stock markets were extending losses from Thursday, with the UKโ€™s FTSE 100 down about 0.4% on Friday morning.

Germanyโ€™s Dax and Franceโ€™s Cac were seeing deeper falls of about 0.9%.

It follows another day of losses on Wall Street, with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones indexes falling by about 1.5%.

The pound was also down by about 0.5% against the US dollar, at 1.327.

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