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Tuesday, 5 November 2013 00:01 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
More data pointing to a strong recovery in the United States, in addition to numbers that came out on Friday, would raise expectations the Fed may cut back its stimulus.
That would reduce supply of dollars in the market, bolstering the currency and making dollar-denominated assets such as oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.
The dollar index was holding firm at 80.691 on Monday having climbed to a seven-week peak on Friday.
Brent faces resistance at $ 108.70 and support at $ 102.50 this week, Spooner said. For the US benchmark the upper end is $ 98.70, with the next support at $ 92.70 once the contract makes a significant breach below $ 94.67, he said.
For the fourth quarter, prices may remain under pressure and slide from current levels, analysts at Barclays said in a note.
“In our view, Q4 is rich in swing factors for the crude oil markets, yet the directional bias for prices is slightly to the downside from current levels,” they said. “We maintain our Q4 forecast of $ 105/bbl for Brent and do not expect prices to venture out too far on the upside from $ 110/bbl currently.”
The spread between Brent and the US benchmark, which held around $ 12 a barrel, may widen to as much as $ 15 a barrel, analysts at BNP Paribas said in a note. That would make it the widest since March, according to Reuters data.
Developments in OPEC-producer Libya left investors worried about supply, keeping oil supported.
Leaders of an autonomy movement in Libya’s oil-rich east unilaterally declared a regional government on Sunday, in a further challenge to the weak central government.
The recent spate of protests and strikes at ports and oil fields have knocked down crude production to some 10% of Libya’s capacity of 1.25 million barrels a day.
While easing of tensions between Iran and the West about Tehran’s disputed nuclear program and a weak global economy mean supply fears have eased somewhat and oil markets are amply supplied, concerns over disruption from the region continue to remain nevertheless.
“Middle east is not in the agenda right now, but it is always with us,” Spooner said. “Any new supply threat, or significant decline in output will support prices.”