Oil eases away from $70, eyes positive talk in Iran

By Staff
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SINGAPORE, June 19 (Reuters) Oil eased away from on Monday after shedding 2.4 percent last week, with dealers weighing more positive signals from Iran on its atomic programme.

US light, sweet crude fell 28 cents to .60 a barrel on Monday, snapping a three-day rising streak. Brent crude dropped 10 cents to .70 a barrel.

Oil slumped to a more than three-week low of .10 last Wednesday amid a commodities and equity sell-off sparked by inflation concerns, but later recovered in tandem with other markets after a more doveish message from the Federal Reserve.

While U.S. growth worries may continue to niggle oil market speculators, most traders will be focused on Iran as they await its reaction to a package of incentives from global powers meant to end the months-long standoff over its atomic agenda.

''With the Iran issue hanging around, you can't really take too negative a view of (the market),'' said David Thurtell of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. ''I think oil could drop to if Iran gives up its nuclear processing ambitions and I think it will.

It's just trying to extract some incentives.'' Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Sunday said a ''positive atmosphere'' may help bridge the gap with world powers over its nuclear programme, but did not say when Tehran would respond to the Security Council powers plus Germany.

''The positive atmosphere that has been created ... could create the best opportunity to pave the way to reaching an understanding,'' Mottaki said on state television.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday said the package was ''a step forward'', but also said Iran would not be concerned by possible sanctions if it rejected the June 6 offer.

The West believes Iran's uranium enrichment could be used to make nuclear weapons. Tehran says it is purely for power generation and civilian use.

Oil now sits in the middle of the - range that has contained it since early May, pressured by worries about slowing growth and underpinned by real and threatened supply disruptions that pushed prices above a barrel in April.

China, the world's second-biggest consumer, on Friday moved to curb the rapid credit growth that its leaders fear could cause the red-hot economy to overheat, raising the proportion of money banks must keep in their reserves by half a percentage point.

REFINERY HICCUPS Refinery upsets may also help keep gasoline prices supported as dealers gauge how record-high U.S. pump rates have affected holiday plans in the world's biggest consumer, where gasoline use accounts for more than one-tenth of world oil demand.

A gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit at Exxon Mobil's 563,000 barrel per day (bpd) Baytown, Texas, refinery -- the largest U.S. refinery -- shut down on Friday, according to a regulatory notice on Sunday.

The unit, one of three catalytic crackers at the refinery, had been going through an overhaul that began in May and was expected to end this week with the unit's return to production. It had two malfunctions, including a shutdown, in April.

Gasoline fell 1.32 cents or 0.65 percent lower to SINGAPORE, June 19 (Reuters) Oil eased away from $70 on Monday after shedding 2.4 percent last week, with dealers weighing more positive signals from Iran on its atomic programme.

US light, sweet crude fell 28 cents to $69.60 a barrel on Monday, snapping a three-day rising streak. Brent crude dropped 10 cents to $68.70 a barrel.

Oil slumped to a more than three-week low of $68.10 last Wednesday amid a commodities and equity sell-off sparked by inflation concerns, but later recovered in tandem with other markets after a more doveish message from the Federal Reserve.

While U.S. growth worries may continue to niggle oil market speculators, most traders will be focused on Iran as they await its reaction to a package of incentives from global powers meant to end the months-long standoff over its atomic agenda.

''With the Iran issue hanging around, you can't really take too negative a view of (the market),'' said David Thurtell of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. ''I think oil could drop $6 to $7 if Iran gives up its nuclear processing ambitions and I think it will.

It's just trying to extract some incentives.'' Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Sunday said a ''positive atmosphere'' may help bridge the gap with world powers over its nuclear programme, but did not say when Tehran would respond to the Security Council powers plus Germany.

''The positive atmosphere that has been created ... could create the best opportunity to pave the way to reaching an understanding,'' Mottaki said on state television.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Friday said the package was ''a step forward'', but also said Iran would not be concerned by possible sanctions if it rejected the June 6 offer.

The West believes Iran's uranium enrichment could be used to make nuclear weapons. Tehran says it is purely for power generation and civilian use.

Oil now sits in the middle of the $68-$73 range that has contained it since early May, pressured by worries about slowing growth and underpinned by real and threatened supply disruptions that pushed prices above $75 a barrel in April.

China, the world's second-biggest consumer, on Friday moved to curb the rapid credit growth that its leaders fear could cause the red-hot economy to overheat, raising the proportion of money banks must keep in their reserves by half a percentage point.

REFINERY HICCUPS Refinery upsets may also help keep gasoline prices supported as dealers gauge how record-high U.S. pump rates have affected holiday plans in the world's biggest consumer, where gasoline use accounts for more than one-tenth of world oil demand.

A gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit at Exxon Mobil's 563,000 barrel per day (bpd) Baytown, Texas, refinery -- the largest U.S. refinery -- shut down on Friday, according to a regulatory notice on Sunday.

The unit, one of three catalytic crackers at the refinery, had been going through an overhaul that began in May and was expected to end this week with the unit's return to production. It had two malfunctions, including a shutdown, in April.

Gasoline fell 1.32 cents or 0.65 percent lower to $2.0250 a gallon on Monday.

REUTERS PDS GC0825Y .0250 a gallon on Monday.

REUTERS PDS GC0825Y

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