Oil higher in Asian trade as US gains support on Syria

AP FILE PHOTO

SINGAPORE – Oil prices rose in Asian trade Thursday as US President Barack Obama cleared the first legislative hurdle in his race to win congressional backing for military strikes on Syria.

New York’s main contract, West Texas Intermediate for delivery in October, gained 31 cents to $107.54 in afternoon trade, while Brent North Sea crude for October gained 23 cents to $115.14.

The gains came after the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee backed an amended resolution authorizing strikes in Syria, albeit with a 90-day deadline and barring the use of ground forces for combat purposes.

Obama was meeting world leaders in Russia Thursday as he strives to bridge deep divisions over his push for action triggered by an alleged chemical weapons attack on Damascus suburbs.

Teoh Say Hwa, head of investment at Phillip Futures in Singapore, said the initial expression of support from Congress had increased the likelihood of military action.

This has raised concerns “that the unrest may spread in the Middle East region, which accounts for a third of the world’s crude, and disrupts oil supplies”, she told AFP.

Chua Hak Bin, Southeast Asian economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Singapore, said high oil prices could hurt economic growth.

“An oil price surge comes at a particularly bad time, when several Asian countries – particularly India and Indonesia – are already facing pressures from high inflation, large fuel subsidies, and widening oil-trade deficits,” he said in a note.

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