Oil prices edged lower in cautious Asian trade Friday as
investors await the release of a US jobs report for August that could
determine the Federal Reserve's timetable for hiking interest rates.
US
benchmark West Texas Intermediate for October delivery fell 17 cents to
$46.58 while Brent crude for October eased 16 cents to $50.52 in
late-morning trade.
"With the Federal Reserve closely
eyeing employment figures in order to gauge the strength of the economy,
US non-farm payrolls should be crucial," said Daniel Ang, investment
analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
"If non-farm payrolls turn out lower than expected, this could suggest a December 2015 rate hike instead," Ang said.
A
rate hike would likely strengthen the greenback, making dollar-priced
oil more expensive to holders of weaker currencies, hurting demand and
prices.
However, Ang said crude retained some support
after the European Central Bank (ECB) on Thursday indicated more
stimulus could be on its way for the eurozone.
BOND BUYING
ECB
president Mario Draghi said the bank was ready to ramp up its vast
bond-buying scheme — known as quantitative easing (QE) — if needed to
kick-start the stuttering eurozone economy.
The bank
also cut its growth and inflation forecasts for 2015-2017, noting the
downside risks from low oil prices and the economic slowdown in China.
Ang said Draghi's comments "caught the attention of the markets more, allowing markets to remain bullish".
Ang said Draghi's comments "caught the attention of the markets more, allowing markets to remain bullish".
Prices
have fluctuated wildly in recent weeks on uncertainty about Fed
monetary policy as well as worries about the economy of number-one
energy consumer China.
Tuesday saw them turn sharply
lower after weak manufacturing data from China and the United States
clouded the outlook. They had surged more than 25 per cent over the
three days before that.
AFP
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