SINGAPORE: Oil fell in Asian trade on Wednesday but the decline was seen as limited with heating oil demand set to stay firm as a cold spell continued to grip the United States and Europe, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in February sank 11 cents to 91.38 dollars per barrel.
Brent North Sea crude for February delivery was down 14 cents to 94.24 dollars.
Analysts say prices will be underpinned by strong heating oil demand which has perked up because of the unusually strong cold spell in the northeast US and parts of Europe.
"As long as the extreme cold in northern hemisphere persists, this will lend some support to oil prices in the near term," said Chen Xin Yi, a commodities analyst for Barclays Capital.
US reserves fell by about 15 million barrels in the first half of December in the face of brisk demand and end-of-year inventory adjustments by refiners.
New figures on US stocks are to be published Thursday.
Oil demand from China, the world's biggest energy consuming nation, is also another factor bolstering prices, she said.
"China's demand growth has scaled a new high in November, topping 9.3 million barrels per day, with diesel, jet fuel and gasoline demand all setting record highs in the month," she said.
Barclays Capital predicts oil prices will average 91 dollars per barrel in 2011.
source: geo.tv
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