Oil prices mixed in Asian trade | Inquirer Business

Oil prices mixed in Asian trade

/ 02:54 PM January 23, 2012

SINGAPORE — Oil prices were mixed in Asian trade Monday on concerns over Europe’s ability to deal with its towering debt crisis and worries about supply disruptions in the Middle East, analysts said.

New York’s main contract, West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in March, was down 27 cents to $98.06 a barrel in the afternoon.

Brent North Sea crude for March delivery gained 32 cents to $110.18.

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“There is still great worry over whether Greece will be able to deal with its huge debt problem… which may soften demand for crude,” said Ken Hasegawa, energy desk manager at Newedge brokerage in Tokyo.

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European Union finance ministers are set to meet in Brussels on Monday to forge ahead with plans to implement a fiscal pact and finalise a treaty setting up a permanent debt rescue fund.

The ministers will also decide on the terms of a second bailout for Greece — the epicentre of the eurozone’s debt crisis — after private creditors refused to write down the country’s debt any further over the weekend.

Simmering tensions in the Middle East between Western powers and major oil producer Iran are supporting prices.

EU foreign ministers are meeting Monday to strengthen existing sanctions on Tehran by banning imports of its crude as well as targeting finance, petrochemicals and gold.

The ministers will also discuss seeking new suppliers able to match the easy conditions offered by Tehran to Greece, which imports over a third of its crude oil from Iran.

Contacts are underway with Saudi Arabia and hopes are high that Libya can soon increase its production.

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The new EU sanctions are part of a concerted effort with the United States to pressure Iran into halting its controversial nuclear activities, which the West suspects are aimed at developing nuclear weapons.

Iran says its nuclear programme is purely for civilian use.

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The EU ministerial meeting comes hard on the heels of a Pentagon announcement that the US aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln on Sunday passed through the Strait of Hormuz and is now in the Gulf, after Tehran threatened to close the strategic shipping route.

TAGS: Asian Trade, Business, economy, Markets and Exchanges, oil and gas, oil prices

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