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Oil Updates — prices hover near two-week low; weak China data adds to demand concerns

Oil Updates — prices hover near two-week low; weak China data adds to demand concerns
Brent crude oil futures rose by 42 cents, or 0.54 percent, to $77.5 per barrel by 7:30 a.m. Saudi time. Shutterstock
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Updated 28 January 2025

Oil Updates — prices hover near two-week low; weak China data adds to demand concerns

Oil Updates — prices hover near two-week low; weak China data adds to demand concerns

NEW YORK/SINGAPORE: Oil prices ticked up but hovered near a two-week low on Tuesday after weak economic data from China and warming weather forecasts elsewhere soured the demand outlook.

Brent crude oil futures rose by 42 cents, or 0.54 percent, to $77.5 per barrel by 7:30 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 34 cents, or 0.46 percent, to $73.51. Brent settled on Monday at its lowest since Jan. 9, while WTI hit its lowest since Jan. 2.

China, the world’s largest importer of crude oil, reported on Monday an unexpected contraction in manufacturing activity in January, adding to concerns over global crude demand growth.

“The general tone of caution in the risk environment, coupled with weaker Chinese PMI numbers that cast further doubt on China’s oil demand outlook, may serve as a drag on oil prices,” IG analyst Yeap Jun Rong said.

China’s crude oil demand is also expected to be hit by the latest US sanctions on Russian oil trade. FGE analysts see refineries in Shandong losing up to 1 million barrels per day of crude supply in the near-term amid a ban imposed by the Shandong Port Group on US-sanctioned tankers.

“Alternative crude barrels (to Russian supply) are being sought after at the same time, but they come at much higher costs,” the analysts noted.

Several independent refineries in China have halted operations, or plan to do so, for indefinite maintenance periods, sources told Reuters, as new Chinese tariff and tax policies plunge plants deeper into losses.

India, the world’s third-largest crude importer, also faces disruptions to Russian oil supply, but refiners there are taking advantage of a wind-down period in the sanctions to make purchases until March, the FGE analysts said.

In the US, weather forecasts are for warmer-than-normal temperatures through this week, which is weighing on demand for heating fuels after extreme cold sparked a natural gas and diesel rally in prior sessions.

“Temperatures in both regions (US and Europe) are increasing, allowing for heating fuel demand to slide off some,” StoneX oil analyst Alex Hodes said on Monday.

Broader financial markets were under pressure from a surge of interest in a low-cost artificial intelligence model launched by Chinese firm DeepSeek.

“Losses (in the oil market) appear relatively limited from the turmoil in US tech stocks,” IG’s Yeap said.

Still, caution is likely to persist as the Feb. 1 deadline for US tariffs approaches, with any potential trade restrictions likely to introduce downside risks to global growth, which could translate to downward pressure on oil, Yeap added. 


MENA startup funding rises 1,411% mom to $783m

MENA startup funding rises 1,411% mom to $783m
Updated 52 sec ago

MENA startup funding rises 1,411% mom to $783m

MENA startup funding rises 1,411% mom to $783m
  • Funding landscape sees notable shifts among emerging ecosystems

RIYADH: Startup investment across the Middle East and North Africa accelerated sharply in July, with total funding reaching $783 million across 57 deals.

The rise marks a 1,411 percent increase from June and more than double the amount raised in July 2024, positioning the third quarter of 2025 for robust regional growth, according to Wamda’s monthly report. 

The increase was driven primarily by two megadeals, highlighting sustained investor appetite for later-stage, high-growth opportunities. 

ֱ led regional funding activity, securing $396.5 million across 16 deals, while the UAE followed with $359 million raised in 22 startups.  

The Kingdom’s performance was boosted by three major rounds, including Q-commerce platform Ninja’s $250 million raise led by Riyad Capital, propelling it to unicorn status, foodtech startup Calo’s $39 million series B extension, and SaaS provider Lucidya’s $30 million series B.   

The funding landscape saw notable shifts among emerging ecosystems. Iraq claimed third place with a single $15 million transaction for InstaBank, moving ahead of the traditional heavyweight Egypt.  

Morocco followed in fourth, propelled by Ora Technologies’ $7.5 million round.  

Egypt, once consistently in the top three, dropped to fifth place, recording just $4 million in funding across seven startups. Analysts cite macroeconomic headwinds, including currency instability, as contributing factors to Egypt’s diminished share. 

By sector, deeptech overtook fintech for the first time in several months, drawing $250.3 million from four deals.  

E-commerce matched deeptech in total funding, also raising $250 million, driven by Ninja’s record-setting round.  

Software-as-a-service startups came third, attracting $89 million across 12 deals, while fintech dropped to fourth, with $61 million raised in 11 transactions.  

“The shift reflects a growing appetite for IP-heavy, innovation-led ventures and scalable consumer platforms, even as fintech funding cools,” the report stated. 

Two megadeals — Ninja and XPANCEO — accounted for 56 percent of total funding in July, skewing the overall numbers toward large-scale capital deployments.   Series A rounds were notably strong, raising $267 million across three startups.  

Later-stage deals accounted for $158 million, while 26 early-stage companies raised a combined $36 million.   Debt financing represented only 2 percent of the total, reaffirming the continued dominance of equity-based funding in the region.

Our vision is to make high-impact technology radically accessible for agents everywhere.

Fouad Bekkar, founder and CEO of Coraly.ai

The investment landscape also saw renewed interest in consumer-focused business models. Business-to-consumer startups captured $534 million in funding, reversing a trend from earlier this year when enterprise solutions and B2B ventures attracted more capital.  

Business-to-business startups raised $202.4 million across 32 deals, with the remainder distributed among direct-to-consumer and hybrid models. 

However, the gender gap in venture funding persisted. Startups led exclusively by male founders raised $774.5 million across 43 deals. Mixed-gender founding teams secured $5.8 million, while female-led ventures attracted just $3 million from eight deals.  

Despite increased visibility of women in entrepreneurship, funding distributions remain uneven, suggesting that systemic barriers continue to limit capital access for women-led startups. 

With seven months remaining in the calendar year, MENA startup funding has already surpassed the full-year total for 2024.  

The momentum reflects the region’s ongoing transition from nascent to mature innovation ecosystems, with capital flows expanding beyond traditional markets into emerging hubs. 

The sustained activity signals confidence from global and regional investors alike.  

“With ֱ and the UAE drawing record-breaking rounds, and emerging markets like Iraq and Morocco making surprise appearances in the top rankings, investor interest is diversifying beyond traditional hubs,” the report added.

Coraly.ai raises $2m pre-seed round 

A proptech company focused on streamlining lead generation and conversion for real estate professionals, Coraly.ai has raised $2 million in a pre-seed funding round.

The investment was led by Salica Oryx Fund, managed by Salica Investments and based in Abu Dhabi Global Market, with participation from EQ2 Ventures and strategic angel investors. 

Founded as Coralytics and recently rebranded to Coraly.ai, the company uses artificial intelligence to simplify real estate sales workflows.  

“Real estate agents globally are underserved by fragmented, outdated sales tools. Through Coraly.ai, our mission is to simplify growth with AI that just works,” said Fouad Bekkar, founder and CEO of Coraly.ai.  

“This funding gives us the firepower to further accelerate product innovation and expand into key growth markets,” Bekkar added. 

The capital will support the company’s product development roadmap, including engineering hires and advanced AI features. 

FASTFACT

The Kingdom’s performance was boosted by three major rounds, including Q-commerce platform Ninja’s $250 million raise led by Riyad Capital, foodtech startup Calo’s $39 million series B extension, and SaaS provider Lucidya’s $30 million series B.

Coraly.ai will also consolidate its position in the UAE, establish new operations in ֱ, and launch pilot programs in France and the US.   

“Salica Oryx Fund is delighted to be an early supporter and investor in Coraly.ai. It represents a significant advancement in real estate marketing technology, offering an AI-powered platform that fundamentally transforms how properties are marketed and presented online,” said Ivo Detelinov, general partner at Salica Oryx Fund. 

Patrick Thiriet, CEO of EQ2 Ventures, added, “AI is about to leapfrog productivity across many industries where professionals still use ill-adapted legacy software products to run their business. The property market is one of those verticals, with real estate agents spending too much time on non-productive tasks.” 

Coraly.ai’s international growth strategy is reinforced by a go-to-market partnership with SNPI, France’s largest real estate union, representing over 14,800 agencies.  

In North America, the company has secured its first US-based multiple listing service partner, with pilots expected to launch shortly.

Breadfast secures $10m to expand operations

Egypt’s quick-commerce grocery delivery platform Breadfast has raised $10 million as part of its Series B2 round.

The investment was led by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, with participation from Novastar Ventures. 

Founded in 2017, Breadfast has evolved from a bakery delivery service into a full-scale on-demand grocery and household goods provider. The new funding places its valuation between $382 million and $400 million. 

The company will use the capital to expand fulfilment centres in Cairo, Giza, Alexandria, and Mansoura, with plans to enter additional Egyptian cities. It is also investing in Breadfast Pay, a fintech extension offering digital savings, withdrawals, and branded payment cards. 

The fintech unit supports the company’s ambition to develop a broader super-app experience, integrating commerce and financial services to boost customer engagement and retention.

Impact46 invests $6.66m in five MENA gaming studios 

ֱ-based venture capital firm Impact46 has invested more than SR25 million ($6.66m) in five gaming studios — Fahy, NJD Games, Game Cooks, Starvania, and Alpaka — as part of its SR150 million Gaming Fund launched in March 2024. 

The studios span mobile, PC, console, and hybrid-casual gaming, reflecting the growing creative and technical capabilities of the MENA region’s gaming ecosystem. 

“We see gaming as more than a sector; it’s a language of youth, culture, and creation,” said Basmah Al-Sinaidi, managing partner at Impact46.  

“Through these investments, we’re backing builders who aren’t just launching games but creating the infrastructure, stories, and platforms that define the next era of content in the region.” 

Fahy and NJD Games are focused on mobile titles developed in ֱ. Game Cooks, now headquartered in Riyadh, has produced over 22 titles across VR, PC, and mobile platforms and has won multiple international awards.  

Starvania specialises in fantasy PC and console games, while Alpaka develops hybrid-casual mobile games in the action genre. 

These investments follow earlier backing of Spoilz, which develops culturally inspired mobile games, and Spekter Games, a publisher building games for chat-based platforms with Web3 layers.  

Together, the portfolio illustrates Impact46’s commitment to fostering a homegrown gaming ecosystem. 

The initiative aligns with Vision 2030 and ֱ’s National Gaming and Esports Strategy, which aims to position the Kingdom as a global gaming leader.  

Key enablers include the Saudi Esports Federation, CODE, and the Esports World Cup Foundation. 

Perle raises $9m seed round 

UAE-based startup Perle, which is building a decentralized AI training data platform, has closed a $9 million seed funding round led by Framework Ventures.

The funding will support the launch of Perle Labs, a crypto-native ecosystem aimed at enhancing how humans contribute to AI model training. 

Perle uses blockchain infrastructure to provide transparent payments, on-chain attribution, and verifiable work histories for contributors.  

“As AI models grow more sophisticated, their success hinges on how well they handle the long tail of data inputs — those rare, ambiguous, or context-specific scenarios,” said Ahmed Rashad, CEO of Perle.  

“By decentralizing this process, we can unlock global participation, reduce bias, and dramatically improve model performance.” 

The company’s platform supports the full AI development lifecycle, including multimodal data collection, reinforcement learning from human feedback, and assistant fine-tuning.  

It combines human expertise with adaptive workflows to accelerate the accuracy and scale of training data. 

Perle is targeting developers and companies seeking more robust, transparent, and scalable AI data pipelines, with a long-term vision to decentralize the AI supply chain and empower global contributors.


How KSA is blending compliance and innovation to build a global startup hub 

How KSA is blending compliance and innovation to build a global startup hub 
Updated 15 August 2025

How KSA is blending compliance and innovation to build a global startup hub 

How KSA is blending compliance and innovation to build a global startup hub 

RIYADH: ֱ is advancing an ambitious strategy to position itself as a global hub for technology startups, striking a balance between regulatory reform and an unprecedented wave of innovation.   

As the Kingdom races to diversify its economy and reduce dependence on oil, entrepreneurs and legal experts say the country is reaching a pivotal moment in its efforts to create a business environment that is both competitive and predictable. 

Feras Mousilli, managing partner at Lloyd & Mousilli, described the pace of change as remarkable.   

Feras Mousilli, managing partner at Lloyd & Mousilli. Supplied

“The regulatory landscape in ֱ is evolving at an impressive pace and the government’s proposed regulations show a clear intent to support its Vision 2030 goals: reduce barriers, increase clarity, and compete globally for tech innovation,” he told Arab News in an interview.   

Yet as new frameworks take hold, founders continue to grapple with the friction that arises when rapid innovation meets complex compliance requirements. 

In recent years, the Saudi Central Bank and the Capital Market Authority have emerged as key architects of this transformation.

Through sandbox environments and tiered licensing, regulators have created mechanisms for startups to test their ideas with fewer constraints.   

Among the most consequential reforms is the introduction of open banking frameworks, which mandate financial institutions to share Application Programming Interfaces with third-party fintech firms, opening the door to greater competition and inclusion. 

APIs are a set of rules and protocols that allow different software systems to communicate and exchange data. 

For founders such as Hisham Al-Falih, the shift has been both sweeping and hard-won.   

Al-Falih, founder of Lean Technologies. Supplied

“I’d say that the things that have kind of maybe changed the most this year are the introduction of new regulations,” said Al-Falih, founder of Lean Technologies, in an interview with Arab News. 

“In ֱ, the central bank has been continuing its mission and its plan of rolling out open banking,” he added. 

“This is obviously a multiyear effort, and it’s culminating now with the introduction of the PIS, the Payments Initiation Service, which is expected to go live soon,” Al-Falih said. 

He recalled that when Lean Technologies launched in 2019, few policymakers had a roadmap for modern fintech.   

“None of these regulatory kind of bodies really adopted open banking and had plans for it,” he said.   

“And so there’ve been years of discussions and conversations and back and forth with a variety of industry bodies to get to where we’re getting to today.” He added that Lean has worked closely with regulators to help shape the emerging framework. 

Beyond fintech, the Kingdom has implemented comprehensive reforms to the legal framework governing all businesses.   

In February, the government passed a new Investment Law establishing a unified framework for foreign and domestic investors, with enhanced protections and simplified procedures.   

At the same time, a revised Companies Law introduced the Simple Joint Stock Co., designed to make it easier to incorporate and operate a startup. 

Companies were required to update their Articles of Association by Jan. 18, marking a nationwide effort to align corporate governance with international norms. 

These changes coincide with record-breaking momentum in the broader startup ecosystem. 

In 2025, ֱ was recognized as the fastest-growing startup environment in the world, according to the Global Startup Ecosystem Index, which reported Riyadh had climbed 60 places to rank 23rd globally.   

Venture funding has accelerated sharply, achieving a 49 percent compound annual growth rate from 2020 through 2024, with artificial intelligence startups emerging as a priority.   

Riyadh’s growth was catalyzed by a policy-driven approach that prioritized both scale and specialization.   

According to the 2025 Global Startup Ecosystem Report by Startup Genome, more than 200 fintech companies now operate in the Kingdom, supported by the Saudi Central Bank’s regulatory sandbox and Fintech Saudi’s market-building efforts.   

The report highlighted startups such as Lean Technologies, Rasan, and Tamara as examples of companies attracting substantial regional and international capital, with major financial institutions serving as early adopters and anchor clients. 

In addition to fintech, the report praised the Kingdom’s progress in cybersecurity, noting that Riyadh-based firms like Mozn and sirar by stc are developing artificial intelligence-powered solutions for identity verification, fraud detection, and compliance. 

ֱ has emerged as the leading hub for venture capital activity in the Middle East and North Africa, raising $860 million in the first half of the year — a 116 percent year-on-year increase — supported by sovereign initiatives and rising foreign investor interest.  

According to regional venture platform MAGNiTT, the Kingdom recorded 114 VC deals during the period, representing a 31 percent increase from the same time in 2024, and continuing its momentum from the previous year, when it secured the largest volume of funding in the region for the second consecutive year.  

This surge in venture activity is further underpinned by structural reforms and policy incentives.  

As of mid-2025, ֱ’s Ministry of Investment had issued 550 Startup Investment Registrations, known as Riyadi licenses, reflecting a 118 percent annual growth.   

While ֱ’s ambition to become a digital-first economy is undisputed, Mousilli cautioned that rapid change can overwhelm young companies.   

“The challenge comes when compliance is so burdensome or complex that it diverts resources away from core growth,” he said.   

“For example, in fintech, a startup may spend months navigating licensing or anti-money laundering requirements — before they’ve even validated their product-market fit.”   

As a result, he noted, some founders default to “we’ll deal with it later,” exposing themselves to legal risk. 

The Kingdom has signaled that it wants to avoid this trap. Regulators are increasingly adopting risk-based supervision models that calibrate oversight according to the size and systemic impact of each company.   

“The most effective regulators understand that a small startup doesn’t need the same oversight as a multinational bank,” Mousilli said. “ֱ is beginning to adopt this risk-based approach, which is a positive sign.” 

To complement the regulatory overhaul, the government has introduced new compliance mandates around ultimate beneficial ownership disclosures, enhanced anti-money laundering protocols, and environmental, social, and governance reporting, reinforcing transparency and investor confidence.   

The Digital Government Authority reported that digital transformation readiness exceeded 74 percent in 2025, underscoring a push to digitize public services and reduce administrative delays. 

For founders, this shift is not merely regulatory — it is cultural. Al-Falih said that collaborative policymaking has become a defining characteristic of the Saudi tech sector.   

“We’ve been working closely with the Central Bank and the associated parties in the ecosystem to provide our feedback, our notes on how their framework is being written, and to obviously engage with them in a productive way,” he said. 

In the view of many entrepreneurs, these conditions are creating fertile ground for growth. “I would argue that the region has some of the best regulations and infrastructure set up,” Al-Falih said. “And so we will be one of the more successful parts of the world to introduce these technologies.” 

Still, legal experts caution that unresolved issues — such as the enforcement of intellectual property rights, clarity in employment law, and the efficiency of dispute resolution — remain on investors’ radar.   

Mousilli observed that, despite the progress, ֱ will need to maintain its momentum to consolidate its gains. “The frameworks are improving, but clarity and consistency, especially in implementation, remain key areas to watch and develop,” he said. 

Yet for those building the next generation of technology companies, the convergence of regulatory ambition and economic transformation is unmistakable.   

As Al-Falih put it: “This is one of the best times to be alive and one of the best times to be a member of the tech community in the GCC.” 


Global Markets — Asia markets recover after hot US price data

Global Markets — Asia markets recover after hot US price data
Updated 15 August 2025

Global Markets — Asia markets recover after hot US price data

Global Markets — Asia markets recover after hot US price data

SINGAPORE: Stocks in Asia made an uneven recovery as traders assessed the policy options facing the world’s central banks, after an unexpected spike in producer price data in the US renewed inflation concerns.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.2 percent after a report on Thursday from the Bureau of Labor Statistics which showed the Producer Price Index increased 0.9 percent in July on a month-on-month basis, well above economists’ expectations.

The report prompted traders to rein in expectations of how quickly the Federal Reserve would be able to cut rates at its September meeting without stoking further inflation.

“What it did was to get rid of all the chat about a 50 basis point cut,” said Mike Houlahan, director at Electus Financial Ltd in Auckland.

The market is currently pricing in a 92.1 percent probability of a 25 basis point rate cut at its meeting next month, compared with a 100 percent likelihood of a cut on Thursday, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool. The chance of a jumbo 50 basis point cut fell to zero from an earlier expectation of 5.7 percent a day ago.

US stock futures were up 0.2 percent in Asian trading and on track for a fourth day of gains after a choppy trading session on Wall Street on Thursday. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury bond was down 2 basis points at 4.2732 percent.

The two-year yield, which is sensitive to traders’ expectations of Fed fund rates, slipped to 3.7233 percent compared with a US close of 3.739 percent.

The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of currencies of other major trading partners, retraced some gains after the PPI data release, last trading down 0.2 percent at 98.026.

The Nikkei rebounded 1.6 percent to near a new record high, following a sell-off on Thursday that marked the index’s biggest decline since April 11 and snapped a six-day winning streak. Japanese GDP data released on Friday showed the economy expanding by an annualised 1.0 percent in the April-June quarter, beating analyst estimates. The dollar weakened 0.5 percent against the yen to 147.09.

Australian shares were last up 0.7 percent, while stocks in Hong Kong were down 1.1 percent.

The CSI 300 rose 0.8 percent after the release of weaker-than-expected Chinese economic data for July, including retail sales and industrial production, stoked speculation of fresh stimulus. Markets in India and South Korea are closed for public holidays.

Cryptocurrency markets stabilised after a new record for bitcoin of $124,480.82 on Thursday proved fragile and promptly crumbled after falling short of its next key milestone. The digital currency was last up 0.8 percent, recovering some ground, while ether gained 1.7 percent.

“Bitcoin's failure to conquer the $125,000 resistance signals another consolidation phase,” said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG in Sydney.

In commodities markets, Brent crude was down 0.3 percent at $66.63 per barrel ahead of a meeting in Alaska between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

“The first meeting doesn’t seem like a major market-moving event - it’s more to set up a second meeting, which will likely be more important,” said Marc Velan, head of investments at Lucerne Asset Management in Singapore. “If a ceasefire is reached, expect a positive reaction in the euro and a weaker dollar; the opposite if a ceasefire fails.”

Gold was slightly lower as the markets digested the path of inflation-adjusted interest rates, which typically move in the opposite direction from bullion prices. Spot gold was trading up 0.3 percent at $3,343.94 per ounce. 

In early European trades, the pan-region futures were up 0.5 percent, German DAX futures were up 0.5 percent, and FTSE futures gained 0.5 percent.


Aramco inks $11bn Jafurah gas deal with BlackRock-led consortium

Aramco inks $11bn Jafurah gas deal with BlackRock-led consortium
Updated 15 August 2025

Aramco inks $11bn Jafurah gas deal with BlackRock-led consortium

Aramco inks $11bn Jafurah gas deal with BlackRock-led consortium

RIYADH: Saudi Aramco signed an $11 billion lease-and-leaseback agreement with a consortium led by Global Infrastructure Partners, part of BlackRock, for midstream assets tied to its Jafurah gas development.

Under the deal, the newly formed Jafurah Midstream Gas Co. will lease development and usage rights for the Jafurah Field Gas Plant and Riyas NGL Fractionation Facility, then lease them back to Aramco for 20 years, according to a press release. 

The company will collect a tariff from Aramco, which retains exclusive rights to receive, process and treat raw gas from the field.

The transaction secures one of the largest foreign direct investments in the Kingdom’s energy sector and builds upon the strong existing relationship between Aramco and BlackRock. In 2022, BlackRock co-led a consortium of investors in a separate minority investment in Aramco Gas Pipelines Co.

In a press statement, Amin H. Nasser, Aramco president and CEO, said: “Jafurah is a cornerstone of our ambitious gas expansion program, and the GIP-led consortium’s participation as investors in a key component of our unconventional gas operations demonstrates the attractive value proposition of the project.” 

He added: This foreign direct investment into the Kingdom also highlights the appeal of Aramco’s long-term strategy to the international investment community. As Jafurah prepares to start phase one production this year, development of subsequent phases is well on track.” 

As part of the deal, Aramco will own 51 percent of JMGC, while the GIP-led group will hold the remaining 49 percent. The transaction, free of production volume restrictions, is expected to close once customary conditions are met.

Jafurah, the Kingdom’s largest non-associated gas field, holds an estimated 229 trillion cubic feet of raw gas and 75 billion stock tank barrels of condensate. The field is central to Aramco’s plan to boost gas production capacity by 60 percent between 2021 and 2030 to meet rising demand.

Bayo Ogunlesi, GIP’s chairman and CEO, said: “We are pleased to deepen our partnership with Aramco with our investment in ֱ’s natural gas infrastructure, a key pillar of global natural gas markets.” 

The deal attracted significant interest from global investors, with co-investors from Asia and the Middle East participating. Aramco said the agreement will help optimize its asset portfolio and capture additional value from Jafurah’s development.


Oil Updates — prices maintain gains ahead of Trump-Putin summit 

Oil Updates — prices maintain gains ahead of Trump-Putin summit 
Updated 15 August 2025

Oil Updates — prices maintain gains ahead of Trump-Putin summit 

Oil Updates — prices maintain gains ahead of Trump-Putin summit 

NEW YORK: Oil prices nudged higher on Friday to fresh one-week highs after US President Donald Trump warned of “consequences” if Russia blocked a Ukraine peace deal, injecting concerns about supply. 

Sentiment was also boosted by strong economic data out of Japan, which is among the largest global crude importers. 

Brent crude futures gained 16 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $67.00 a barrel by 03:17 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 14 cents, also 0.2 percent, to $64.10. 

All eyes are on Friday’s meeting of Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska, where a ceasefire in the Ukraine war is at the top of the agenda. A continued conflict between Russia and Ukraine supports oil markets by limiting the supply of Russian oil. 

Trump, however, also said he believes Russia is prepared to end the war in Ukraine. 

Fresh Japanese government data released on Friday showed the economy expanded an annualised 1.0 percent in the April-June quarter, compared with a median market forecast for a 0.4 percent increase. 

The rise in gross domestic product translated into a quarterly increase of 0.3 percent, compared with a median estimate of a 0.1 percent increase. Strong economic activity typically spurs oil consumption. 

Prospects of higher-for-longer US interest rates, however, kept oil prices from rising further. 

Higher-than-expected inflation data and weak jobs numbers out of the US raised concerns that the Federal Reserve would keep interest rates high, usually a dampener of oil consumption.