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Oil settles down over 4% on US-Iran de-escalation, easing supply worries

Oil settles down over 4% on US-Iran de-escalation, easing supply worries

A view shows disused oil pump jacks at the Airankol oil field operated by Caspiy Neft in the Atyrau Region, Kazakhstan April 2, 2025. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev

02 Feb 2026 07:20AM (Updated: 03 Feb 2026 04:24AM)

NEW YORK, Feb 2 : Oil prices fell more than $3 per barrel on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran was "seriously talking" with Washington, signaling a de-escalation of tensions with the OPEC member, while a stronger dollar and milder weather forecasts also pressured prices.

Brent crude futures fell $3.02, or 4.4 per cent, to settle at $66.30 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell $3.07, or 4.7 per cent, to $62.14 per barrel.

Iran and the U.S. will resume nuclear talks on Friday, officials from both countries told Reuters.

On Saturday, Trump told reporters that Iran was "seriously talking", hours after Tehran's top security official Ali Larijani said arrangements for negotiations were underway.

The U.S. president had repeatedly threatened Iran with intervention if it did not agree to a nuclear deal or if it continued killing protesters. The threats underpinned oil prices throughout January, said Phillip Nova analyst Priyanka Sachdeva.

The U.S. dollar also strengthened as currency traders cheered Trump's nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair. A stronger dollar makes dollar-denominated oil more expensive for investors using other currencies.

Forecasts of milder weather in the U.S. also pressured oil prices, as diesel futures pulled back sharply, Ritterbusch and Associates said. U.S. futures prices for diesel, used in heating and power generation, fell more than 6 per cent.

Together with tensions in the Middle East, a polar vortex in the U.S. had helped U.S. WTI futures rise 14 per cent and Brent gain 16 per cent in January, PVM analysts said in a note.

With those issues fading in relevance, the focus is returning to a widely anticipated buildup of global oil inventories this year, they said.

At a meeting on Sunday, OPEC+ agreed to keep its oil output unchanged for March. In November, the grouping had frozen further planned increases for January through March 2026 because of seasonally weaker consumption.

Source: Reuters
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