UPDATE 9-Oil settles up 3 pct on dollar, U.S. consumer data

Mon Nov 16, 2009 8:40pm GMT
 
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 * Dollar under pressure as Obama tours China
 * OPEC president says too early to talk about output
 * Swelling U.S. oil stocks highlight demand weakness
 (Updates with settlement prices)
 By Rebekah Kebede
 NEW YORK, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Oil prices settled above $78 a
barrel, up over 3 percent on Monday as a weaker dollar and
better-than-expected U.S. consumer spending data boosted
prices.
 U.S. crude futures for December delivery CLc1 settled at
$78.90 a barrel up $2.55, after reaching a high of $79.52 a
barrel.
 In London, Brent crude LCOc1finished at $78.76, up $2.45.
 "The main reason crude futures are up today is the weaker
dollar. The greenback fell as money traders were selling the
greenback in the face of better U.S. retail sales and business
inventories," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at PFGBest Research
in Chicago.
 The U.S. dollar slipped against a basket of currencies
.DXY after the United States and China failed to reach an
agreement on currencies at an Asia Pacific summit ahead of U.S.
President Barack Obama's visit to China. [ID:nSP43459]
 Washington has said an undervalued yuan is contributing to
trade imbalances between the United States and China. A weaker
dollar typically supports commodities because dollar-priced
contracts become cheaper for buyers using other currencies.
 Further support came following strong U.S. retail sales
data for last month, boosting optimism about the economy.
[ID:nN16371323]
 Energy markets have been looking to wider economic data for
signs of a rebound that could boost fuel demand, which has been
hard hit by the recession.
 U.S. retail sales rose 1.4 percent in October, after a drop
of 2.3 percent in September, mostly due to robust vehicle
sales. [ID:nN16507114]
 The positive consumer data outweighed a report from the New
York Federal Reserve Bank showing that manufacturing activity
in the state has slowed in November.
 Wall Street rose to a 13-month high on Monday as
commodity-related stocks, including oil and metals, lifted
equities. [.N]
 Despite climbing oil prices, OPEC's president, Jose Botelho
de Vasconcelos, said the market was still oversupplied and that
it was too early to make any changes to OPEC's output
quotas.[ID:nLF478744]
 (Additional reporting by Gene Ramos in New York, Chris Baldwin
in London, Fayen Wong in Perth; Editing by Marguerita Choy)


 

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