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Brent oil hits $113 on Libya unrest

Last Updated 24 February 2011, 04:25 IST

Copper also bounced off one-month lows, although the dollar stayed on the back foot as some investors worry that the U.S. economy would be vulnerable to high oil prices, given its reliance on consumer spending to drive growth.

London Brent crude rose as high as $113 a barrel for the first time since September 2008, having gained nearly 10 percent in the past four sessions. U.S. crude last traded at around $99.38 a barrel, a whisker away from Wednesday's high of $100.

Worries that higher energy prices will crimp corporate profits had sparked a steep selloff in Asian stocks in the past two sessions, but that looked to be losing its punch.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index .N225, while still 0.4 percent lower on the day, was off its lows and stocks elsewhere in Asia .MIAPJ0000PUS erased early losses to be up 0.4 percent.

"As Japanese stocks have tumbled for the past two sessions (losing 2.6 percent), today's losses may not be sharp," said Masumi Yamamoto, a market analyst at Daiwa Securities Capital Markets.

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(Published 24 February 2011, 04:25 IST)

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