SINGAPORE: Brent crude slipped toward $107 per barrel on Friday after an almost 18 per cent rally over four weeks prompted some selling as worries about a conflict in the Middle East eased slightly.
Brent rose to an eight-week high in the previous session, gaining for seven straight days as tensions in the Middle East and disruptions in output in the North Sea stoked supply fears.
Brent crude slipped 55 cents to $107.25 a barrel by 0751 GMT. The contract settled up $2.64 on Thursday and touched an intraday top of $108.18, the highest since May 22.
US September crude fell 55 cents to $92.11. The August contract ended up $2.79 and touched a high of $92.94 in the previous session, also the highest since May 22.
"Prices were getting stretched a little, getting a bit ahead of themselves," said Mark Pervan, senior commodities strategist at ANZ Bank. "This rally is supply driven, and supply-driven rallies tend to be very volatile because when prices go up, they threaten to hurt demand."
Brent is set to rise for a fourth straight week, its longest winning streak since the end of February. It has gained about 18 per cent over the period, biggest four-week rally since October 2009. US oil is on track for an almost 6 per cent gain this week, its third weekly gain in four.
The most important supply threat to oil for now is from the Middle East, as global powers try to force Iran to halt its disputed nuclear programme. Tension escalated after a bus carrying Israeli tourists was bombed in Bulgaria, for which Israel blamed Iran.
Israel's allegation, based on suspicions that Iranian and Hezbollah agents have been trying for years to score a lethal strike on its interests abroad, triggered speculation in local media that the government might now hit back hard.
But worries eased slightly as Israel signalled that it would not rush into any conflict.
Analysts, however, cautioned that concerns about supply from the Middle East was far from over and that this would limit any further slide in prices.
"Middle East tensions now mean that supply concerns are entering the crude oil equation which is creating an upward price pressure," Tim Waterer, senior trader at CMC Market, said in a report.
"With the added element of potential QE3 ( quantitative easing) keeping a lid on the dollar, it would appear that the recent rally in oil still has room to move on the upside with a return to $100 per barrel now a realistic proposition."