Oil prices rose in Asian trade today, supported by healthy economic indicators in the world’s major economies, analysts said.
New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in March, was up two cents at $96.68 a barrel in the morning trade and Brent North Sea crude for March delivery climbed 18 cents to $116.70.
A slowdown in the contraction of euro zone business activity soothed fears about political uncertainty in Italy and Spain — which had sent markets plunging in the US and Europe on Monday — while upbeat US services sector data lifted US oil futures.
Malaysian bank CIMB said in a research note that the rebound in the US services sector in January signalled “growth in 90 per cent of the US economy and stronger demand for crude’’.
A rebound in global stock markets also helped lift oil prices, analysts said.
“European markets steadied the ship last night to reinforce that the start-of-week wobble could be just a blip rather than a shift back to the dark days of euro zone panic attacks,” said Jason Hughes, head of premium client management at IG Markets Singapore.
Economics research house pointed to a “broad-based” recovery in the manufacturing sector worldwide, which is supportive of energy demand.
The forward-looking purchasing managers’ indices for Latin America and emerging Asia “have risen rapidly since mid-2012 and the latest figures point to a turnaround in emerging Europe too,” it said.