Oil prices were mixed in Asia today on fears of a possible default by Cyprus as the European Central Bank said it would halt funding to lenders if a new bailout deal was not found, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in May added 11 cents to USD 92.56 a barrel while Brent North Sea crude for May delivery was down two cents to USD 107.45 in mid-morning trade.
The withdrawal of European Central Bank support for Cypriot banks could lead a possible run by customers scrambling to withdraw their cash, resulting in the collapse of the island's financial system.
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Sentiment was further dented by data showing private business activity across the eurozone hitting a four-month low in March.The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) published by London-based Markit fell to 46.5 points in March against 47.9 in February, the flash estimate showed. A reading above 50 indicates growth while anything below is considered contraction.
The PMI business activity data also showed that the German economy, Europe's main growth driver, was beginning to be affected by the problems in the rest of the continent."Much hope was pinned on Germany to lift the region out of the dumps," DBS Group Research said in a market commentary.