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* Oil eases after near 4 pct fall
* Rising US, euro zone job losses hit recovery hopes
* JP Morgan sees risk of price fall to $60
(Previous PERTH, updates prices)
LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - Oil eased below $67 a barrel on
Friday, after a nearly 4 percent fall in the previous session,
pressured by a stronger dollar and investor concern about the
economic outlook and energy demand.
In the latest sign the economy of the world's top consumer
was still struggling, data on Thursday showed U.S. employers cut
467,000 jobs in June and the jobless rate rose to a 26-year
high. Euro zone unemployment rose to a 10-year high.
"Data from last night were pretty traumatic," said Stefano
Vincelli, an equities and derivatives broker at Halifax
Investment Services in Sydney.
"Also, now that sentiments are getting more bearish, we're
again seeing a negative correlation between the U.S dollar and
commodities prices."
U.S. crude for August delivery CLc1 slipped 9 cents to
$66.64 a barrel by 0808 GMT. London Brent crude LCOc1 fell 14
cents to $66.51.
NYMEX floor trading will be closed on Friday for the U.S.
Independence Day holiday. Electronic trading will be open.
Volume may be lighter than normal, leading to volatile trading,
analysts said.
The dollar edged higher against a basket of other major
currencies, limiting the appeal of oil and commodities as an
inflation hedge. European stocks pared early gains.
Oil prices have doubled from a low of $32.40 a barrel in
December last year and surged over 42 percent in the last
quarter -- the largest quarterly gain since 1990 -- partly on
hopes of economic recovery.
But the latest economic data is suggesting that a global
recovery will be choppy this year, if it occurs at all.
Economists have warned that surging unemployment would be one of
the key threats to a sustainable recovery.
JP Morgan said in a report on Friday that it expects oil
prices to correct from the recent rally to about $60 a barrel or
lower, amid ongoing demand weakness.
Analysts who use past price moves to predict price direction
see a similar prospect.
"Risks are shifting for a downside correction toward $60 in
the weeks ahead before the larger bull trend resumes," Barclays
Capital technical analysts said.
(Additional reporting by Fayen Wong in Perth)
(Reporting by Alex Lawler, Editing by Peter Blackburn)
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