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Oil edged up above $64 a barrel on Tuesday, after four consecutive days of falls on worries about the economy that have brought the stock market rally to a halt and pushed the dollar higher. The market could find more direction from the American Petroleum Institute's weekly crude and products stocks data to be released at 2030 GMT, and expected to show a fall in crude and a rise in product stocks.
US light crude for August delivery rose 21 cents to $64.26 a barrel by 0214 GMT, having settled down 4 percent on Monday at $64.05, its lowest settlement in more than a month. London Brent crude gained 23 cents to $64.28. When risk aversion rises, investors cut holdings of stocks and higher-yielding currencies and often buy back yen and US dollars that were used to finance the trades. Oil prices have fallen 8 percent since the beginning of July after having doubled from lows below $33 hit last December on economic optimism in the second quarter that has since fizzled out.
Growing unrest in Nigeria, where militants have launched at least four attacks against oil installations in the past ten days, put a floor on falling prices in the past few weeks. But it failed to push prices higher on Monday when the main militant group said it had sabotaged a Chevron oil facility and seized a chemical tanker and six crew members.
Analysts polled by Reuters predicted US crude oil inventories fell last week for the fifth week in a row by 2.2 million barrels on average, while they expected gasoline stocks to have gained 800,000 barrels and distillate inventories 1.7 million barrels.
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) will also release its monthly report later on Tuesday. Last month, the EIA raised its forecast for 2009 world demand by 10,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 83.68 million bpd, the first time since September that it had increased the demand estimate in its rolling monthly forecast.

Copyright Reuters, 2009

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