Oil prices crept above $77 a barrel on Friday in Asia despite investor doubts about U.S. crude demand.
Benchmark crude for December delivery, which earlier fell to as low as $76, was up 57 cents to $77.51 a barrel at late afternoon Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract gave up $2.34 to settle at $76.94 on Thursday.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration said on Thursday in its weekly report that oil inventories rose 1.8 million barrels and gasoline stocks grew 2.5 million, both larger-than-expected increases.
Oil has bobbed between $76 and $82 for the last month as traders mull how much a high U.S. unemployment rate, which rose to 10.2 percent in October, will drag on consumer demand for crude products such as gasoline.
“I don’t think demand will pick up until the economy starts creating jobs,” said Clarence Chu, a trader at market maker Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore.
Last month, crude broke through a $65-$75 range that it had been in for most of the summer on signs the economy was recovering. Some analysts expect crude to stay above that range going into 2010.