oilSINGAPORE: Oil prices were mixed in Asian trade Friday as a slump in US crude inventories was offset by economic concerns over Europe and China, analysts said.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in January gained 30 cents to $96.47 a barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for January delivery slipped 40 cents to $107.38.

Crude markets were indecisive coming off data from the US Department of Energy (DoE) showing a sharper than expected fall in US stockpiles against weaker global economic diagnoses, Barclays Capital said in a report.

"Oil prices remain largely range-bound with the tug-of-war between solid fundamentals and faltering macroeconomic picture continuing," it stated.

"The latest DoE data shows a sharp fall in crude inventories... (but) the pressure from uncertainty concerning the euro area, China and global growth in general is likely to weigh on prices," Barclay's report added.

Data issued Thursday showed US crude reserves falling 6.2 million barrels  last week against market expectations of a gain of 300,000, according to analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires, indicating strengthening demand.

But global economic concerns cast a pall over crude markets, with a poor German bond sale pushing Europe's debt crisis to new depths and figures showed slumping manufacturing activity in top global energy consumer China.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

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