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 SINGAPORE: Brent crude held near $107 a barrel on Tuesday as fresh sanctions, and the prospect of military action, against Iran offset persistent worries about the health of Western economies and fuel demand.

The United States, Britain and Canada on Monday announced new sanctions on Iran's energy and financial sectors, ratcheting up pressure on Tehran to stop its nuclear programme.

Investors fear oil prices could spike in the event of air strikes on Iran's nuclear sites, which could suddenly cut supply from OPEC's second largest crude producer and disrupt trade in the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil transit channel.

The uncertainty helped bolster prices, under pressure from the worsening debt crisis in Europe and the United States that is expected to hurt economic growth and fuel demand.

ICE Brent January crude rose 7 cents to $106.95 a barrel by 0423 GMT, after falling for four consecutive sessions. Brent has risen 13 percent this year, and is set for a third annual gain.

US January crude fell 22 cents to $96.70 a barrel, after three sessions of losses.

"Iran adds a risk premium to crude," said Jonathan Barratt, managing director of Commodity Broking Services.

US sanctions have already made it extremely difficult for many global oil companies and traders to obtain bank financing to trade Iranian crude, less than a third of which goes to Europe, with the rest flowing to China and India.

France has urged the European Union and other nations to immediately freeze the assets of Iran's central bank and to suspend purchases of Iranian oil, steps it described as "sanctions on an unprecedented scale".

"Depending on how the issue escalates, we may see $150 crude which will have dramatic concerns especially as Western economies are trying to emerge from a slowdown," Barratt said.

Washington-based energy consultancy Rapidan Group said a military conflict could cause oil prices to jump by $23 a barrel initially.

"Potentially massive price increases would follow in subsequent weeks, depending on whether the key Strait of Hormuz choke point is blocked and how officials respond," it said in a research note.

Escalating unrest in other Middle East nations Egypt and Syria also underpinned oil prices, analysts said.

EUROPE, US DEBT

World equities took a hit on Monday as fears about the ability of politicians on either side of the Atlantic to tackle huge debt burdens sapped investors' confidence in riskier assets.

A "super committee" of US lawmakers failed to reach agreement on a deficit cutting plan while risk premiums on Spanish, Italian, French and Belgian government bonds rose as investors fled to safe-haven German Bunds.

"The big concern now is whether US politicians will stall an economy that is starting to recover," ANZ analysts, led by Mark Pervan, said in a note.

Barratt added: "There is a higher potential for a more aggressive slowdown in the United States and we've already got that concern in Europe."

Copyright Reuters, 2011

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