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Oil rises in Asia after last week's sell-off

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in June, rose $1.18 to $98.36 a barrel.

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Crude was higher in Asian trade today, clawing back some of the ground it lost in sharp sell-offs last week.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in June, rose $1.18 to $98.36 a barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for June delivery gained 52 cents to $109.65.

"Oil prices are heading up this morning primarily reacting to the very sharp loss late last week, which was too much and too fast," said Victor Shum, a Singapore-based analyst from Purvin and Gertz international energy consultancy.

"We therefore see some buying (as traders) considering the pricing level to be an buying opportunity," he added.

Positive employment data from the world's biggest oil consumer also provided a boost to oil prices.

The US labour department's stronger-than-expected non-farm job creation data released last Friday hinted at a growing US economy, although the overall unemployment rate also rose to nine percent.

The data was welcomed by markets "so we have seen some recovery in oil prices, and the sharp drop (of) last week is likely to be temporary," Shum told AFP.

Meanwhile, Qatar's energy minister Mohammed Saleh al-Sada told reporters on Sunday that an upcoming OPEC meeting could not be expected to make any major change, insisting that oil production and supplies were at healthy levels.

"We think the fundamentals are fine and we can't see shortage of supply. OPEC countries and non-OPEC countries are producing and supplying and satisfying the world demands," he said.

"Clearly the supply level and the stocks level is healthy, and we are after the stability of oil prices."

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