SINGAPORE: Oil
retreated in Asian trade on Tuesday as investors took profits from
overnight gains, while weak eurozone manufacturing data also pressured
prices, analysts said.
New York's main contract, West Texas
Intermediate crude for delivery in May, shed 28 cents to $104.95 per
barrel while Brent North Sea crude for May settlement was down 36 cents
at $125.07 in morning trade.
Prices had surged in late trade on
Monday, supported by stronger-than-expected industrial data in the
United States, the world's biggest oil user.
"There has been
some profit-taking... from the price surge brought on by US
manufacturing data," said Victor Shum, senior principal at Purvin and
Gertz international energy consultants in Singapore.
"The
manufacturing data that came out from Europe were quite weak, and that
has offset the US data and is weighing on prices," he told AFP.
A
purchasing managers index (PMI) compiled by Markit research firm showed
that eurozone manufacturing activity slumped to a three-month low in
March, with major economies Germany and France hit by the slowdown.
The index, a survey of 3,000 eurozone manufacturers, fell to 47.7 points in March, down from 49 points in February.
A score below 50 indicates contraction.
A
decline in new orders and rise in oil prices, which weighed on
production costs, contributed to the decline in eurozone manufacturing
activity, the research firm said.
There were "further signs that
the manufacturing malaise already exhibited at the periphery of the
currency bloc was spreading to the core," it added.
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