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RTRS:Brent crude rises above $114 on tight supply prospects
 
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Brent crude climbed above $114 on Wednesday, buoyed by hopes of higher demand in the months ahead and tighter U.S. inventories, but concerns about moderating economic growth in China and euro zone debt woes kept a lid on gains.

ICE Brent crude climbed 67 cents to $114.28 a barrel by 0629 GMT. The benchmark rose more than $2 on Tuesday, its first gain in three sessions. U.S. crude was at $97.76 a barrel, up 87 cents.

Soft manufacturing data from China and ongoing worries about Europe's economy have weighed on sentiment, but the prospect of tightening global oil supplies propelled Brent oil to a two-week high on Tuesday.

"We expect strong demand growth in China, India, Saudi Arabia and Brazil, while non-OPEC supply increases are unlikely to keep up," said Chen Xinyi, a commodities analyst with Barclays Capital. "Our demand forecast for China already takes into account the moderation in GDP growth in 2012."

Barclays Capital raised its 2012 forecast for Brent by $10 to $115 per barrel, and upgraded its 2012 forecast for U.S. crude by $4 to $110. The bank left its Brent forecast for 2011 at $112 but cut its U.S. crude 2011 forecast by $6 to $100.

Citigroup said Brent will fall to $90 a barrel by September because of the International Energy Agency's move to release oil reserves and an increase in Saudi Arabia's production, before bouncing for the longer term.

However, Asian refiners may skip taking extra volumes of crude being offered by top exporter Saudi Arabia as the kingdom failed to cut prices deeply enough to lure buyers.

The Saudis have effectively signaled that they believe the market is well supplied at current prices and they see no need to offer bigger discounts, said Clyde Russell, a Reuters market analyst.
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