Crude prices were mixed in Asia
Tuesday as traders cheered on a Franco-German debt rescue commitment and
exports from oil-producing Kuwait were disrupted, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in
November, was up 18 cents to $85.59 per barrel.
Brent North Sea crude for November delivery dipped 14 cents
to $108.81.
Crude markets were supported by optimism resulting from
promises by eurozone giants France and Germany on Sunday of swift and incisive
action to combat the region's debt crisis, as well as a Kuwaiti export
disruption, analysts said.
"There was... the strike in Kuwait exports and France
and Germany coming to agree to keep up with a plan to tackle the eurozone debt
crisis," said Ker Chung Yang, commodity analyst for Phillip Futures in
Singapore.
"All these positive sentiments led energy prices,"
he told AFP.
Kuwaiti exports were disrupted Monday as over 3,000 customs
officers went on strike demanding better pay, with a trade union official
saying that there was a "complete halt to shipping and land freight".
The strike in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting
Countries' third largest producer has already caused at least one oil tanker to
be barred from sailing as it did not receive customs clearance, and could have
wider effects on global oil supply.
Source : AFP
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