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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Oil hovers below $77 a barrel in Asia as traders mull euro after $1 trillion bailout plan

SINGAPORE - Oil prices hovered below $77 a barrel Tuesday in Asia after wild gyrations of the euro whipped crude around for the last week.

Benchmark crude for June delivery was down 13 cents to $76.67 a barrel at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The June contract rose $1.69 to settle at $76.80 on Monday.

Oil is down from an 18-month high of $87.15 a barrel early last week as the European debt crisis undermined investor confidence in the euro. Commodities priced in dollars, such as oil, become more expensive for investors holding euros as the U.S. currency strengthens.

Crude rebounded Monday after the European Union Commission and International Monetary Fund pledged a loan package of euro750 billion ($975 billion) to defend the common currency, but closed off its high of $78.51 as the euro gave back some of its gains.

The euro fell to $1.2725 on Tuesday from $1.2790 on Monday while the dollar fell to 92.72 yen from 93.29 yen.

Some analysts expect the bailout to temporarily stabilize European bond prices but eventually weaken the euro and weigh on oil prices.

"While the euro-zone support plan appears sufficient to forgo any contagion for now, additional weakening in the euro should eventually spill over" into oil prices, Ritterbusch and Associates said in a report.

In other Nymex trading in June contracts, heating oil rose 0.27 cents to $2.123 a gallon, and gasoline was steady at $2.173 a gallon. Natural gas fell 2.0 cents to $4.150 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude was down 15 cents to $79.97 on the ICE futures exchange

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