Oil prices recovered today thanks in part to a softer dollar despite worries over supply and the breakdown in Greece's debt talks, an analyst said.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for July was up 60 cents at $60.12 while the Brent contract for August, a new contract, was up 32 cents at $64.27 in late morning trade.
"Oil prices have fallen over 3% since June 10, so it is possible that traders feel it is a good time to cover some of their short positions," Bernard Aw, market strategist at IG Markets in Singapore, told AFP.
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Greece and its creditors are locked in a stalemate after loan talks collapsed over the weekend, bringing Athens just two weeks away from a catastrophic default on its debt, which could be followed by its exit from the eurozone.
Both sides insisted on Monday they were willing to engage, but without making a decisive step to break the deadlock.
The talks concerning the release of the 7.2 billion euros ($8.1 billion) in rescue funds remaining in Greece's bailout have dragged on for five months.
Before today's mild rebound in crude futures prices, sentiment was weighed down by worries that US oil output is not declining and Saudi Arabia could further ratchet up production.