Oil was mixed in Asia today as traders took a breather after strong economic data from the US pushed prices to a five-week high, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in May, dropped 12 cents to $96.22 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude for May delivery gained two cents to $109.38.
Prices touched their highest point in five weeks yesterday, helped by firm US economic data.
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"Traders are happy to leave prices where they are and wait for further news such as inventory figures from the United States."
US home prices crept higher in January, a 20-city index showed yesterday, and new orders for durable goods in the United States surged 5.7 per cent in February, driven by a sharp rise in civilian aircraft sales.
Positive US economic numbers continue "to be a white knight within the unpredictable global economy," IG Markets Singapore said in a report.
"No region is more volatile than the eurozone, and it has done its best to dent confidence in an economic recovery this year," it added.
Worries over the eurozone remained after Cyprus warned that "superhuman" efforts were needed to reopen its banks by Thursday.
The island this week averted a collapse of its banking system after reaching an 11th-hour financial bailout with its creditors.