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oilSINGAPORE: Oil prices were mixed in Asia on Friday as European debt concerns weighed and data from the US and China showed contrasting fortunes in their manufacturing sectors, analysts said.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in January, fell 12 cents to $100.08 per barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for January delivery added eight cents to $109.07.

Crude prices faced downward pressure as "investors focused on signs of further economic slowdown in Europe and a weaker factory sector in China," a report from Phillip Futures stated.

China on Thursday released data showing its manufacturing activity shrank for the first time in 33 months, igniting fears that the world's largest energy consumer's economy was being hit by global financial headwinds.

European debt fears were also stoked on Thursday by Italian economic development minister Corrado Passera, who warned the country "definitely risks returning to recession" even as the government prepared measures to cut budgets and boost growth.

However, accelerating expansion of the US manufacturing sector and actions taken by major central banks to boost liquidity in global financial markets were a silver lining amid the clouds of economic doom, Phillip Futures' report said.

The US Institute for Supply Management on Thursday announced that its manufacturing index hit 52.7 in November, much higher than the 51.0 expected by

economists and up from 50.8 in October.

Central banks of the eurozone, Canada, Britain, Japan, United States and Switzerland said Wednesday they were lowering the cost of providing US dollars to banks to prop up the global financial system.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

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