Oil moves back higher after falls
Oil prices came back higher Wednesday following a steep fall in the face of warnings from world leaders that record highs were challenging economic growth, dealers said.
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for August delivery, rose 1.08 dollars to 137.12 dollars a barrel. The contract tumbled by 5.33 dollars to close at 136.04 at the New York Mercantile Exchange on Tuesday.
Brent North Sea oil for August delivery rose 97 cents to 137.40 following a plunge of 5.44 dollars to 136.43 Tuesday in London.
The Group of Eight (G8) rich nations said it was ready to take action to cushion global growth from runaway energy costs, but stopped short of announcing concrete steps at a summit in Japan.
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The G8 -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -- expressed "strong concern" about oil and food prices, which they said "pose a serious challenge to stable growth worldwide."
Oil prices have roughly doubled over the past year and have sparked protests around the world.
On Wednesday G8 leaders held an expanded summit that brought in energy-thirsty China and India as well as other key developing nations.
Sucden analyst Nimit Khamar said many economies face a bleak economic outlook "which could reduce the demand for oil, especially at current prices."
The London Brent contract hit an all-time peak of 146.69 dollars and New York crude struck a record high of 145.85 dollars last Thursday.
Oil traders were also awaiting a weekly report on energy stockpiles in the United States to be released later Wednesday.
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