Oil held above US$60 ($86.90) a barrel in Asian trade Monday ahead of a meeting this week of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
New York's main futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in July, was down US$0.33 to US$61.34 a barrel in morning trade. Brent North Sea crude for July delivery retreated US$0.23 to US$60.55.
Prices eased as investors cashed in on profits ahead of the OPEC meeting on Thursday.
"Traders are taking profit from the markets," said Mark Pervan, a senior commodities analyst with ANZ Bank in Melbourne.
"It's probably a view that there is less likelihood of an output cut. OPEC has been fairly quiet on cutbacks so far."
Algerian oil minister Chakib Khelil was quoted by Dow Jones Newswires as saying Sunday that he expected oil prices to hit US$70 a barrel next year.
Oil at US$70 a barrel is widely seen as the sustainable level for producers to resume large efforts to search for oil and gas.
The global economic crisis which towards the end of 2008 has seen energy demand plummet, dragging prices along with it.
Oil prices have fell from a record around US$147 per barrel in July to about US$32 in December as demand dropped off but have since risen gradually.
OPEC, which pumps some 40 percent of the global supply, has steadily cut production since late last year in a bid to support prices.