Oil
prices were higher in Asian trade Monday, lifted by buoyancy in regional stock
markets, but analysts said the spectre of another global recession was expected
to limit gains.
New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate crude for
delivery in September, was up one cent to $85.39 a barrel in afternoon trade.
Brent North Sea crude for September advanced 11 cents to
$108.14.
"Asian stocks are gaining and so oil futures are rising
in parallel to that," said Victor Shum, an analyst with Purvin and Gertz
energy consultancy in Singapore.
"But I expect that the market will continue to be rocky
and volatile because there's still concern about a potential return of the
global economy to a recession," he told AFP.
"Traders will be wary and the wariness will limit any
upside in the short term for crude."
Asian stocks were higher, with Tokyo getting a boost from
better-than-expected gross domestic product (GDP) figures that showed the
country is on the road to recovery after its devastating tsunami.
Asia followed a positive end to Wall Street's week with gains
in all the main regional markets, giving dealers hope after a turbulent few days
during which they were battered by eurozone debt fears and a US credit
downgrade.
But fears over a double-dip recession continued to haunt the
markets.
World Bank chief Robert Zoellick said in Australia on Sunday
that investors had lost confidence in the economic leadership of several key
countries and warned that global markets were in a "new danger zone"
as a result.
Zoellick said a convergence of events in the United States
and Europe had rattled investors in countries already struggling to cap sovereign
debt issues and unemployment.
"And what we've seen is that confidence is a fragile
element of how the market economy works," he said.
Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong also said in a key
policy speech Sunday that Asia, including China and India, would be vulnerable
if the United States and Europe sank into another recession.
Source : AFP
Online Booking Hotel
EmpireMoney
No comments:
Post a Comment