Oil retreats from large jump as focus returns to Iran talks

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Reuters :
Oil futures fell on Thursday, retreating from big gains in the previous session, as the prospect that any deal in nuclear talks with Tehran and a possible increase in its crude exports helped to keep pressure on prices.
Major powers and Iran have stretched talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme into a second day past an end-March deadline, with diplomats saying the chances for a preliminary deal were balanced between success and collapse.
Both Brent and US crude prices snapped three-session losing streaks on Wednesday, gaining $2 or more after data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) showed a fall in rigs drilling for oil resulted in a drop in US output last week for the first time since late-December.
Brent crude for May delivery LCOc1 was down 46 cents at $56.64 a barrel.
The contract had settled $1.99 higher on Wednesday.
US crude for May delivery CLc1 was down 56 cents at $49.53 a barrel, after closing up $2.49, or 5.2 percent.
In the Swiss city of Lausanne, US Secretary of State John Kerry and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said they would stay at least until Thursday in an effort to seal a “political” agreement with Iran, a step towards a final pact due by end-June that could release more oil on to global markets.
Optimism for an agreement is thin among many analysts.
“(I expect) nothing beyond a general statement of intentions to keep talks going through spring,” professor Scott Lucas of EA WorldView, a specialist website on Iran and Syria, told Reuters Global Oil Forum.
Despite US production falling for the first time since late December, crude inventories still rose last week to a record high for the 12th straight week.
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