Oil hovers around 79 dollars in Asian trade

SINGAPORE: Oil prices rose slightly, extending gains in Asian trade Monday, as investors awaited the European market’s reaction to last week’s bank stress test results and as a US storm threat eased, analysts said.

New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in September, edged up 13 cents to 79.11 dollars a barrel while Brent North Sea crude for September delivery gained 22 cents to 77.67 dollars.

“The oil market is likely to extend its gains, although they could be quite muted, while waiting for the European market to open. Support will come from the strong US equities markets on Friday,” Serene Lim, a Singapore-based oil analyst with Australia’s ANZ bank, told AFP.

The market’s gains on Friday were helped by rising US equities as encouraging company earnings propelled Wall Street stocks to their best levels in a month but were pared after the stress test results were released.

Many analysts questioned the rigour of the assessments after the results found seven banks, mainly in Spain, failed the tests out of 91 banks assessed for resistance to economic upheaval.

“Up to now the Asia markets have some scepticism that the stress tests on the European banks were not strict enough so they will be looking at the European reaction,” Lim said. Prices were also capped after the threat of Tropical Storm Bonnie eased at the weekend as fears that it could damage oil production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico faded, Lim said.

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Oil prices fall in Asian trade

SINGAPORE : Oil prices dipped in Asian trade on Monday as sentiment was dampened by weak US economic data that spurred concerns of slow demand in the world’s largest energy consumer, analysts said.

New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in August shed 30 cents to 75.71 dollars a barrel while Brent North Sea crude for September delivery was 28 cents off at 75.09 dollars.

“Oil prices have come off somewhat and the US economic data released (last week) was a little bit on the soft side,” said David Moore, a Sydney-based commodity strategist with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

“That certainly is a factor that is acting to dent the oil price at present.”

Economic reports released Friday renewed concerns about the US economic recovery after the University of Michigan said its consumer sentiment index dropped almost 10 points — far steeper than forecast — to 66.5 in July.

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