(Corrects paragraph 12 to 2130 GMT ..., not 1500 GMT.)
* Boost from weaker dlr, hopes of Greek rescue plan
* Market awaits weekly API oil inventory data due later
* U.S. snowstorm, geopolitical tension offer price support
(Recasts with prices, weak dollar)
By Jennifer Tan
SINGAPORE, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Oil recovered early losses to
rise above $72 a barrel on Tuesday, buoyed by a weaker U.S.
dollar and hopes that European Union leaders could soon cobble
together a rescue package for ailing euro zone countries.
Sentiment turned after the euro rose against the dollar,
clambering off last week's 8-½-month low on speculation of a
rescue for struggling Greece after European Central Bank chief
Jean-Claude Trichet left a meeting of central bankers in Sydney
early for a European Council meeting. [ID:nSGE6170O9] [USD/]
U.S. crude for March delivery <CLc1> rose 24 cents to
$72.13 a barrel by 0715 GMT, after hitting a morning low of
$71.32. The contract settled up 70 cents at $71.89 per barrel
on Monday.
London Brent crude <LCOc1> was up 35 cents to $70.46.
"The recovery in crude is very much dollar-driven. There
was a bounce in the euro due to short-covering, which helped
boost oil prices," said Michelle Kwek, an analyst at Informa
Global Markets in Singapore.
Crude had slumped in early trade, reversing a near 1
percent gain on Monday, as fears over the euro zone's sovereign
debt woes had cast a pall over commodity and equity markets.
Investors are cautiously awaiting the outcome of a special
economy summit of European Union leaders in Brussels on Feb.
11, as the bloc grapples with a debt crisis in Greece and
budget concerns in other member states. [ID:nLDE6031IT]
Investors have looked to wider economic data over the past
year for signs of a recovery in the global economy and a
potential rebound in flagging energy demand.
Japan's Nikkei average edged down to a two-month closing
low on Tuesday after Wall Street ended Monday below the
10,000-level for the first time since November. [.N] [.T]
Over the past year, oil prices have frequently weakened as
the dollar firmed, at times signalling a flight to safer havens
by investors.
Crude has lost nearly 10 percent this year, dragged down by
data showing bulging fuel stockpiles in the United States
despite cold weather, concerns about slower Asian demand if
China further tightens its monetary policy, and more recently,
jitters over Europe's financial stability.
The market will also await the release of weekly U.S. oil
inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute (API), due
at 2130 GMT, for further clues on the recovery in demand from
the world's top energy consumer.
A Reuters poll has forecast a mixed report. Domestic crude
inventories were seen rising 1.2 million barrels due to
increased imports, while distillate stocks, which include
heating oil and diesel, were expected to have fallen, and
gasoline supplies were likely to have edged higher, the poll
showed. [EIA/S]
Some price support will come from another big winter storm
expected to sweep across the U.S. mid-Atlantic this week, after
a blizzard dumped half a metre of snow over the weekend and
closed the federal government. [ID:nN08206421]
U.S. heating demand this week is seen to be 11.5 percent
above normal, the National Weather Service said on Monday.
[ID:nN08188220]
Rising geopolitical tension could also underpin oil prices.
International pressure for new sanctions against Iran grew on
Monday after Tehran announced plans to make higher-enriched
uranium and add 10 nuclear sites in a year, reawakening Western
fears it wants to develop atom bombs. [ID:nLDE61705I]
(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)