The unrest in Iran may give the Trump administration the ammunition it needs to back out of the Iranian nuclear deal and slap new sanctions on Iran. President Trump views Iran as the number one state sponsor of terror and feels that the Iranian regime is one of the major causes of war and conflict in the region. Trump wants to take a hard stance against Iran and this could be his opening.

As far as Iran goes it looks like Iranian President Hassan Rouhani will be set up as the fall guy as he is not a favorite of the Iranian hardliners and because he is the public face of Iran’s bad economy. President Rouhani made all kinds of promises that after he signed the Iranian nuclear deal, economic good times for the Iranian people would be right around the corner. Instead, unemployment is high, and the Iranian economy is not benefiting from the economic surge that we are seeing in the rest of the globe.

The Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has yet to make a statement but there is a growing sense that he is being pressured by the hardliners to crack down hard on the protestors. Of course, if Khamenei goes that route he will give President Trump the excuse he needs to come down even harder on the Iranian regime. More sanctions would mean higher oil prices. If the Supreme Leader cracks down too hard it would be a mistake as President Trump might get the support from other allies to toughen sanctions if not to reverse the Iranian nuclear deal that Trump says was a terrible deal. 

The Libyan oil pipeline that was attacked by terrorists has been restarted and so has the Fortes pipeline, yet it will take time to replace all the oil that was lost over the last few weeks. The Zaggut to Es Sider oil pipeline, in eastern Libya, cost the market 70,000 barrels to 100,000 barrels of oil production per day and Fortes 450,000 barrels per day.

As far as reports go we get a double dose of post-holiday excitement. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) is going to release reports on petroleum stockpiles as well as demand and storage for natural gas. We are looking for yet another big draw on crude oil in 2 million barrels! For distillate, look for a drop of 3.5 and gasoline a drop of 1.0 million barrels. Natural gas should see a drop of 222 bcf. Though the whisper number could see a drop larger than the 222. Cold and now snow will grip traders’ minds.

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