Crude futures rose about 1 percent on Wednesday to recover some ground after steep drops in the previous session, boosted by expectations that U.S. crude stocks could fall for a fourth straight week. Prices were also supported by comments from western diplomats that a nuclear deal with Iran was unlikely by a June 30 deadline, and the oil producer would not get sanctions relief before the end of the year in the best of cases. July Brent crude LCOc1 rose 60 cents to $64.32 a barrel by 0651 GMT, while U.S. crude was up 75 cents at $58.78 a barrel. Both contracts fell more than 2 percent on Tuesday after a stronger greenback curbed buying interest in dollar-denominated commodities such as oil. U.S. commercial crude inventories likely decreased by 2 million barrels last week, a preliminary Reuters survey showed. Declining U.S. stockpiles of crude and oil products in […]