Oil rebounds in Asian trade, above US $75
Oil rebounded in Asian trade after five straight days of losses, but trading was subdued due to concerns over the strength of the global economic recovery and the impact on energy demand.
A sharp slowdown in second quarter growth in Japan, the world’s third biggest energy-consuming nation, affected market sentiment already spooked by weak economic data from the United States, analysts said. New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for September delivery, was up 12 cents to US $75.36 a barrel in morning Asian trade.
Brent North Sea crude for delivery in October added four cents to US $75.67. Ken Hasegawa, energy desk manager of Newedge brokerage in Japan, said the market was paring down losses after prices fell over the past five trading days. Oil prices began tumbling after the US Federal Reserve said US economic recovery in the near term was likely to be more modest than anticipated.
Hasegawa added that GDP figures from Japan released on Monday showing lower-than-expected growth still had-some influence on the market. “It seems that market participants remained cautious after the release of the Japanese figures while risk-aversion is back… Amid these uncertain economic conditions,” said Sucden analyst Myrto Sokou. Agencies



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