Oil
prices rose in Asia Thursday on positive Chinese and Australian data, analysts
said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in
October, advanced 25 cents to $89.06 per barrel in the afternoon.
Brent North Sea crude for October delivery gained 15 cents to
$115.00.
Data earlier Thursday showed China's official Purchasing
Managers' Index jumped to 50.9 in August from 50.7 the previous month, which
was the lowest in more than two years. Anything above 50 suggests expansion
while a figure below indicates contraction.
Those figures came as Australia released figures showing
retail sales rose a better than expected 0.5 percent in July from the previous
month. The rise followed a 0.1 percent month on month fall in June.
Ker Chung Yang, commodity analyst for Phillip Futures in
Singapore, said the data provided some support to oil prices.
The PMI data from China, the world's largest energy consumer,
"suggests that factory activity is stabilising despite the tight monetary
conditions at home and listless demand abroad," he added.
"This would be some of the good news that is boosting
the oil prices."
Source : AFP
EmpireMoney.com
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