Oil rises 2 pct on U.S. factory data
NEW YORK - Oil rose nearly 2 percent to
above $79 a barrel on Tuesday after data showed U.S. factory
orders in September expanded at a quicker pace than expected,
signaling potential for more fuel demand in the world's biggest
energy consumer.
Factory orders rose 0.9 percent in September, surpassing
Wall Street analyst expectations, and factory inventories fell.
"Factory orders are a positive sign. This helps the broad
sentiment that an economic recovery will eventually boost fuel
demand and send prices higher," said Gene McGillian of
Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut.
Crude oil rose along with gold, which reached a record
above $1,084 an ounce. India's Central Bank bought 200 tonnes
of gold from the International Monetary Fund on Monday, in a
sale signaling more commodities demand and reassuring investors
the IMF was unlikely to sell large volumes of gold on the open
market.
"Some people are viewing the rally in gold as a reason to
push crude up," said Tim Evans, energy analyst at Citi Futures
Perspective in New York.
U.S. crude for December rose $1.47 a barrel to settle at
$79.60. London Brent crude futures rose $1.56 to settle at
$77.81 a barrel.
U.S. retail gasoline demand last week rose 3.3 percent from
a year ago , according to a MasterCard SpendingPulse report.
Demand was down 0.4 percent from the previous week, according
to the weekly report.