Oil prices rose on Friday after a Ukrainian drone attack halted oil loadings from Russia’s largest port. Brent crude settled at $66.99 a barrel, up 0.93%, while WTI finished at $62.69, a gain of 0.51%. Traders remained cautious due to a revised U.S. jobs report and higher inflation figures.

The U.S. economy likely created 911,000 fewer jobs in the past year than previously estimated, according to the Labor Department. In August, the consumer price index rose 0.4%, the largest gain since January. Markets are monitoring potential sanctions on Russian crude by the Trump administration to India and China.

Brent and WTI benchmarks fell by 1.7% and 2% respectively on Thursday. The IEA expects global oil supply to rise more than anticipated due to planned output increases by OPEC+ and Russia. OPEC maintains high forecasts for oil demand growth, citing a solid global economic trend.

India’s Adani Group has banned tankers sanctioned by Western countries from entering its ports, potentially limiting Russian oil supplies. India is a major buyer of Russian seaborne oil, mostly shipped on sanctioned tankers. Traders are closely watching for any impact on exports from tariffs to India and China.

Read more at Yahoo Finance: Oil gains weighed down by US demand worries