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RTRS:Oil dips on pressure from economic, demand concerns
 
* U.S. finalizes deal to raise debt limit
* Concerns remain about weak economic indicators
* Coming up: EIA oil data; 10:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday
(Updates stock market result, API data, additional detail
paragraphs 7-10, 12-17 and 23-24)
By Robert Gibbons
NEW YORK, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on Tuesday as
more weak U.S. economic data fueled concern about the economy
even as Congress passed a U.S. debt-cutting measure in time to
avoid a default for the world's top oil consumer.
Congress passed a deficit-cutting package that also raised
the nation's borrowing limit, but ending the debt-ceiling row
for the 2012 election cycle did not remove the possibility of a
credit-rating downgrade. [ID:nN1E77111G]
"The passing of the U.S. debt-ceiling bill should already
be priced into oil markets. Markets are more concerned about
the recent trend of weaker economic data," said Tom Bentz,
director at BNP Paribas Commodity Futures.
A stronger dollar index .DXY also helped pressure
dollar-denominated oil prices.
Brent crude's losses were limited by North Sea supply
disruptions, Libya's crude oil exports lost to civil war and a
fire at a refinery in Taiwan that also was supportive to gas
gas oil LGOc1 and U.S. heating oil futures HOc1.
ICE Brent crude for September LCOU1 fell 35 cents to
settle at $116.46 a barrel, having traded from $115.53 to
$118.40.
U.S. September crude CLU1 fell $1.10 to settle at $93.79
a barrel, the weakest close since June 28. U.S. crude dipped to
$93.08 in post-settlement trade, after an early $95.68 intraday
peak, crisscrossing its 200-day moving average of $95.00.
Technical analysts said U.S. crude could face downside
pressure after breaking below the 200-day moving average on
Monday.
"We see a larger cluster of potential support stretching
from $92.96 to $92.48 to $91.96," said Brian Larose, analyst at
United-ICAP in Jersey City, New Jersey.
"If the zone can provide support, WTI would have the
ability to recover most, if not all, of this past week's
losses," he said.
The trading volatility allowed Brent's premium to U.S.
crude CL-LCO1=R to reach $23.03 a barrel intraday.
Crude trading volumes stayed relatively thin, slipping from
Monday and remaining below 30-day averages for Brent and U.S.
crude.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
ANALYSIS-No fool's rally seen in commods on US debt fix:
[ID:nL6E7J110I]
Graphic on global PMI data r.reuters.com/paz82s
Full coverage of U.S. budget and debt [ID:nUSBUDGET]
FACTBOX-Elements of US debt deal [ID:nN1E76T0AF]
Graphics package r.reuters.com/nud82s
Go long energy in correction-Kozey
link.reuters.com/byb92s
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
API REPORTS LOWER CRUDE STOCKS
Late on Tuesday, the industry group American Petroleum
Institute said U.S. crude inventories fell 3.3 million barrels
last week, against a forecast rise, helping crude futures pare
post-settlement losses. [API/S]
Gasoline stocks jumped 2.5 million barrels and distillate
stocks rose 1.4 million barrels, according to the API.
Ahead of the API report, U.S. crude stocks were expected to
be up 900,000 barrels, a Reuters analyst survey showed, with
supplies from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve seen offsetting
any losses related to Tropical Storm Don. [EIA/S]
Gasoline stockpiles were projected to be up slightly, by
100,000 barrels, while distillate stocks were expected to be up
1.5 million barrels.
Inventory statistics from the U.S. government's Energy
Information Administration will follow on Wednesday.
U.S. retail gasoline demand fell 3.1 percent in the week to
July 29 from a year earlier, while posting a 0.1 percent rise
from the previous week, as price gains since the beginning of
July weighed on consumption, MasterCard said. [ID:nN1E7711G5]
As oil companies continued to restart Gulf of Mexico
operations halted last week by the now-departed Tropical Storm
Don, a new threat, Tropical Storm Emily, simmered over the
Caribbean. [ID:nN180088]
WEAK ECONOMIC DATA
Oil prices felt pressure on Tuesday from a report showing
U.S. consumer spending dropped in June for the first time in
nearly two years and incomes barely rose. [ID:nN1E7710A7]
That data followed Monday's weak manufacturing figures from
the United States, Europe and China and last week's
disappointing second-quarter U.S. GDP estimate that reinforced
fears that slowing economic growth threatens to dampen oil
demand.
"The debt-ceiling distraction may now be behind the
markets, but the damage has been done," said John Kilduff,
partner at Again Capital LLC in New York.
The key U.S. nonfarm payrolls report for July looms on
Friday.
The S&P 500 turned negative for the year as worries about
the economy outweighed relief over avoiding a U.S. default. The
S&P 500's seventh straight lower finish was its longest down
streak since October 2008. [.N]
(Additional reporting by Gene Ramos in New York, Zaida Espana
in London and Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore; Editing by
Marguerita Choy and Dale Hudson)
Source