Oil prices fell slightly today in Asia amid a surprise rise in US weekly crude inventory ahead of the release of government data.
Benchmark crude for February delivery was down 10 cents to $78.77 a barrel at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 10 cents to settle at $78.87 yesterday.
Oil has gained for five straight days but traded lower early today after the American Petroleum Institute reported an increase of 1.725 million barrels in US inventories last week, said Clarence Chu, a trader with Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore.
The rise contradicted market expectations of a drop of 2 million barrels and all eyes are now on the Energy Information Administration weekly data due to be released later today, he said. The more comprehensive EIA data last week showed crude stocks were down 4.9 million barrels.
"Oil prices are still holding. If the EIA numbers again show a reduction in stockpiles, prices will move up but there will be strong resistance at $80 a barrel," Chu said. On the other hand, oil prices will slide if the EIA data show a build up in inventories, he added.
Futures contracts for oil, natural gas and heating oil have all become more expensive this month as snow storms blanketed parts of the US and a sharp drop in supplies of crude and other fuels surprised traders.