Oil prices reached a 2003 low below US$28 per barrel on Monday because the market braced for a rise in Iranian exports following the lifting of sanctions against Tehran over the past weekend.
The United States revoked sanctions that had cut Iran’s oil exports by a couple of million barrels per day (bpd) since their pre-sanctions 2011 peak to nothing more than A million bpd.
Iran, part of the business from the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), issued an order on Monday to improve production by 500,000 bpd, the nation’s deputy oil minister said.
Worries about Iran’s return to an already oversupplied oil market drove down Brent crude to $27.67 a barrel in early stages Monday, its lowest since 2003. The benchmark was down 29 cents US at US$28.64 by 1850 GMT.
U.S. crude was down 48 cents US at US$28.94 a barrel, near a 2003 low of US$28.36 hit earlier in the session. Trading volumes were thin with U.S. markets closed for that Martin Luther King Day holiday.
“Iran’s return to the oil market has been around the diary for some time and therefore doesn’t really come as any great surprise,” Commerzbank senior analyst Carsten Fritsch said in a note.
“Nonetheless, prices were bound to react negatively for the short term cellular the negative market sentiment,” Fritsch added.