Oil prices rose in Asian trade today on strong manufacturing data from top global energy guzzlers, the United States and China, analysts said.
US benchmark, West Texas Intermediate (WTI), gained four cents to $102.51 a barrel in July for delivery, while Brent North Sea Crude for the same month was up nine cents to $108.92 in mid-morning trading.
Analysts said oil prices were tracking gains on Wall Street after the Institute of Supply Management said its purchasing managers index (PMI) of US manufacturing activity rose to 55.4 in May from 54.9 in April.
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China's official PMI of manufacturing activity reached 50.8 in May, the government said, a five-month high, up from 50.4 in March.
PMI data is an indicator of the health of a country's economy, and a reading above 50 indicates growth.
"The oil market at the moment is focused on the manufacturing data out of the US and China," Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, told AFP.
"But we are seeing some of the risk premium associated with Ukraine coming off as the crisis continues to drag on with new developments having little impact," McCarthy said. "That is dampening any upside factor on oil."
Government forces and pro-Russian insurgents have been embroiled in skirmishes for weeks in eastern Ukraine, but the fighting has so far has not expanded into a full-fledged civil war in the ex-Soviet state.
Investors fear a full-blown conflict in Ukraine, a conduit for a quarter of European gas imports from Russia, will disrupt supplies and send energy prices soaring.