Brent crude prices rise on Greek vote

Brent crude rose today, reversing five sessions of losses, as Greece's embattled government survived a confidence vote critical…

Brent crude rose today, reversing five sessions of losses, as Greece's embattled government survived a confidence vote critical to avoid a debt default and as investors awaited the outcome of a key US Federal Reserve meeting.

The US crude benchmark slipped in part after an industry report showed crude stocks in the world's top oil consumer remained were little changed, and as the dollar gained.

Brent crude for August increased 25 cents to $111.20 a barrel, after rising to as much as $111.30. US oil slipped as low as $93.50 a barrel, and was down 53 cents at $93.64 a barrel.

The market will be looking to the Fed for clues about its handling of the faltering economic recovery that may force policymakers to plan for the possibility that things may get worse. In Europe, the International Monetary Fund's warning about risksto Spain added to concerns about the euro zone.

READ MORE

The Fed remains leery of taking any additional steps to support the recovery, with underlying inflation moving higher and officials still smarting from the barrage of criticism that followed their latest round of stimulus.

Yet, recent signs the economy is sputtering, evident in manufacturing activity and employment, will put any debate about withdrawing stimulus on the backburner.

US crude oil stocks fell by a small 81,000 barrels last week as refinery utilization rose, while oil product stocks fell more sharply than expected, American Petroleum Institute data showed. Analysts had expected a drop of 1.4 million barrels in crude stocks for the week to June 17th.

Stock markets from the US to South Korea gained after Greek prime minister George Papandreou won the vote, with the Nasdaq posting its biggest percentage gain since October yesterday, while the S&P 500 marked its best day in two months.

After clearing its confidence vote, the Greek government now faces a more arduous task of passing an austerity plan in order to secure a new bailout from the European Union and IMF.

Spain faces considerable risks to its recovery and must deepen and conclude reform work to allay market concerns, the International Monetary Fund said yesterday.

In an annual mission report, the IMF said Spain's wide-ranging policy response last year had helped the economy to rebalance, but the repair of the economy was incomplete and risks were considerable.

The euro ran into profit-taking in Asia today after the Greek government won a vote of confidence, but further losses may be limited as the market's focus turns to the Federal Reserve.