Oil rebounds in Asian trade

20 May, 2011

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for July delivery, advanced 38 cents to $99.31 a barrel, while Brent North Sea crude for July delivery gained 13 cents to $111.55.

"Oil prices are edging up in huge part because some traders think this is a buying opportunity," said Victor Shum, a Singapore-based analyst at Purvin and Gertz international energy consultancy.

Crude sank on Thursday after the International Energy Agency warned high prices could derail global economic growth and called for increased output from oil producers to tackle the problem.

The Paris-based IEA said surging prices were "affecting the economic recovery by widening global imbalances, reducing household and business income, and placing upward pressure on inflation and interest rates."

Shum said the New York benchmark crude futures contract is likely to hover around $100 in the near term.

Traders are still monitoring the political situation in the Middle East and North Africa, where uprisings have already toppled the leaders of Tunisia and Egypt and unrest has spread to other parts of the oil-producing region.

"Continuing unrest in the Middle East and North Africa region is providing support for oil, and we expect prices to be hovering around the $100 level in the future," Shum told AFP.

 

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

 

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