Oil snaps gains as Europe woes return

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Oil snaps gains as Europe woes return

Oil prices fell on Friday, snapping a string of seven straight higher settlements, as the eurozone debt crisis brought economic concerns back in focus and strengthened the US dollar.

Brent and US crude futures posted weekly gains of more than 4 per cent, both contracts having touched eight-week peaks on Thursday.

US and European equities slid and the euro weakened broadly after Spain's heavily indebted Valencia region called for aid, increasing investor fears that the Spanish government is moving toward a full-blown bailout.

"The dollar spiking higher versus the euro on Spain banks needing help pushed oil lower. Some geopolitical fatigue seemed to emerge as well, with the rumours about Assad taking a deal. Looks like if he goes we will get a selloff," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC in New York.

Syria's Information Ministry said comments by Russia's ambassador to France that President Bashar al-Assad had accepted leaving power in an orderly way were "completely devoid of truth."

Fighting raged as government troops battled rebels at border posts and in corpse-strewn streets in Damascus after a fourth member of Assad's inner circle died from wounds sustained in a bomb attack this week.

Brent September crude fell 97 cents to settle at $US106.83 a barrel, after falling as low as $US105.60 intraday.

Front-month Brent jumped 4.33 per cent for the week, posting a fourth straight weekly gain and having risen 16.5 per cent in the period.

Expiring US August crude fell $US1.22 to settle at $US91.44 a barrel, off its low of $US90.66. For the week, US crude rose 4.98 per cent.

US September crude fell $US1.14 to settle at $US91.83 a barrel.

Volumes were tepid at less than half a million lots traded each for Brent and US crude, as dealings lagged 30-day averages.

US heating oil futures fell more than 2 cents. Gasoline managed to post a gain, less than a penny, keeping front-month August more than 9 cents above the September contract.

Money managers raised their net long US crude futures and options positions in the week to July 17, the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission said.

US demand for crude oil, gasoline and distillates fell in June from a year earlier, the industry group American Petroleum Institute said in a report. The API attributed the drop to a slowing US economy.

Middle East, Iran uncertainty

Concerns about potential supply disruptions in the Middle East have pushed up oil prices recently as violence in Syria intensified and after a Bulgarian bus bombing killed Israeli tourists -- an act Israel blamed on Iran.

New York police believe Iranian Revolutionary Guards or their proxies have been involved so far this year in nine plots against Israeli or Jewish targets around the world, according to restricted police documents obtained by Reuters.

An Iranian lawmaker said just over half of Iran's parliament has backed a draft law to block the Strait of Hormuz shipping lane, reminding investors of the uncertainty involved in the West's dispute with Tehran over Iran's nuclear program.

However, adding to the bearish sentiment on Friday was news that China will load full contracted volumes of Iranian oil in July after refiner Sinopec and the National Iranian Tanker Co resolved a freight dispute.

Chinese news also weighed on copper, another dollar-denominated commodity. The industrial feedstock fell more than 2 per cent on the inflamed worries about the eurozone that strengthened the US currency, but also on China's warning against relaxing curbs on property speculation.

Reuters

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