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imageSINGAPORE: Brent futures rose above $109 a barrel on Monday as supply concerns revived after Libya failed to reach a deal with tribal leaders to end the blockade of several oil-exporting ports. Crude prices, however, may stay in a range much like most other markets as investors await the US Federal Reserve's decision on tapering its monetary stimulus, which has been a key driver of investment in global commodities.

Brent crude rose 40 cents to $109.23 a barrel by 0521 GMT, after posting a weekly loss of 2.5 percent. US oil fell 28 cents to $96.32 after ending 90 cents lower and declining 1 percent for the week. "Libya didn't manage to reach an agreement to restart oil exports even though the government had said it expected the blockade to end," said Ken Hasegawa, a commodity sales manager at Newedge Japan. "That's a support factor for oil, particularly Brent."

The port blockages, along with strikes by oil workers, civil servants, tribesmen and other protesters at oilfields across the desert country, have cut vital oil exports to 110,000 barrels per day from more than 1 million in July.

Western powers worry Libya will slide into chaos as the Tripoli government struggles to rein in militias and tribesmen who helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but kept their weapons and control parts of the OPEC-member country.

Investors are also watching to see if a recent move by the United States to expand a sanctions blacklist may block the implementation of a historic deal between Iran and world powers on Tehran's controversial nuclear programme.

Data showing China's vast factory sector expanded for the fifth straight month, even though the reading in December slowed to a three-month low, underpinned oil prices as well.

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