Oil prices slide after early gains on hopes of firm U.S. data

Reuters

Published Dec 23, 2014 03:05AM ET

Oil prices slide after early gains on hopes of firm U.S. data

By Henning Gloystein

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil prices slid back close to opening levels around $60.20 per barrel on Tuesday, after gaining earlier in the day on expectation of firm U.S. economic data due later on Tuesday.

Front-month U.S. WTI crude CLc1 futures rose over a dollar to a session high of $56.85 a barrel before dipping back to $55.67 at 0745 GMT (2.45 a.m. EST). Brent crude LCOc1 was up 9 cents at $60.20 a barrel.

Analysts said expectations of firm U.S. economic data later in the day had pushed prices higher in thin Asian trading due to a public holiday in Japan.

"The focus of today would likely come from U.S. durable orders and U.S. GDP figures. Durable goods orders depict a strong manufacturing sector which implies a higher industrial use of crude oil," said Singapore-based Phillip Futures in a report on Tuesday.

"With the U.S. economy picking up, we expect the figures to be favorable."

Tuesday's price rises followed a volatile session on Monday, when Brent prices first jumped to almost $63 a barrel on the back of strong international market performances before sliding back to not much over $60 after Saudi Arabia's powerful oil minister said OPEC would not cut production at any price.

"Brent could drop below $60 per barrel over the next six months, and WTI could fall to $50, as global oil inventories build sharply from here," Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a research note.