Brent crude was up $1.13, or 0.9%, to $120.94 a barrel at 1016
GMT, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude had gained
$1.03, or 0.9%, to $118.62.
Both contracts had fallen by more than $1 earlier in the
session.
Brent was on track for its first weekly dip in five weeks, and
U.S. crude for its first decline in eight weeks, in line with a
fall in equity markets amid fears of a possible recession as
central banks joined a chorus of outsized rate hikes.
"The influence of the macro environment has started to take over
from oil specific fundamentals in recent days," said Investec's
head of commodities Callum Macpherson.
"Consistent with the broader market pre-occupation with rates
and inflation, the oil market narrative may now turn to focus
more on affordability, rather than on supply."
However, U.S. sanctions on Chinese and Emirati companies and on
a network of Iranian firms that help export Iran's
petrochemicals lent some support to oil prices.
The U.S. government said while it is pursing diplomacy to revive
a nuclear deal with Iran, it will continue to use sanctions to
limit exports of oil, oil products, and petrochemicals from
Iran.
Analysts estimate that a deal and the consequent lifting of
sanctions on Iran's energy sector could add up to 1 million
barrels of oil per day to global markets.
"The market has been watching negotiations between the West and
Iran in anticipation of a revival of the nuclear deal in recent
months. This brought back into focus the ongoing supply side
issues in the market," ANZ Research analysts said in a note.
The global oil market continues to show signs of "turbulence",
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Friday,
blaming the uncertainties over oil production recovery in Libya,
Iran and Venezuela and a lack of energy infrastructure.
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in London, additional
reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston and Jeslyn Lerh in
Singapore; editing by Tomasz Janowski and Jason Neely)
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