SINGAPORE: Oil was mixed in Asia on Thursday as Middle East tensions escalated after Israel launched a fresh attack in Gaza, while rising US crude stockpiles tempered market sentiment, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in December fell eight cents to $86.24 a barrel while Brent North Sea crude for December delivery gained seven cents to $109.68.
News of the Israeli air strike in Gaza Wednesday that killed a Hamas military chief "reignited" tensions in the oil-producing Middle East and are keeping crude prices on the boil, IG Markets said in a report.
The United Nations will meet in an emergency session later Thursday to try to defuse tensions in the region after the killing of Ahmed Jaabari and his bodyguard.
Despite the tensions in the oil-rich Middle East, "US crude has remained flat... countered by rising US stockpiles", the IG Markets report stated.
A weekly report late Wednesday by the American Petroleum Institute showed crude stocks in the world's largest oil consumer rising 1.3 million barrels last week, indicating weak demand.
This was less than analyst projections of a 1.9 million-barrel gain, but was not enough to reassure traders' fears of slipping US energy demand.(AFP)
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