* Oil heads for fifth straight day of losses
* International Energy Agency revises demand estimate
* EIA data expected to show higher crude stocks
* U.S. Fed Reserve meeting ends on Wednesday
(Updates throughout, changes dateline, previous Singapore)
By David Sheppard
LONDON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Oil slipped towards $69 a barrel
on Wednesday, falling for the fifth straight session, as growing
concerns about the strength of demand pressured prices ahead of
the release of weekly U.S. inventory data.
World oil demand growth will be lower in 2010 than
previously forecast, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said
in its monthly market report on Wednesday, with evidence a
global recovery is underway still limited. []
The Paris-based agency, adviser to 28 industrialised
nations, said global oil demand was now seen recovering by just
1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2010, having fallen by 2.3
million bpd this year as the economic crisis curbed consumption.
World oil demand hit a peak of 86.5 million bpd in 2007.
"Evidence of a bottoming out of the recession is still a bit
patchy. The latest data on industrial production for some of the
larger countries remains negative," David Martin, analyst at the
IEA, told Reuters.
"There is not clear evidence yet we have seen the worst."
U.S. light crude for September delivery <CLc1> fell 25 cents
to $69.20 a barrel by 0857 GMT, having lost $1.15 on Tuesday
following Wall Street losses and after the U.S. Energy
Information Administration (EIA) also revised down its oil
demand forecast.
London Brent crude <LCOc1> fell 50 cents to $71.96.
U.S. INVENTORIES
Falling demand for oil has seen inventories of crude and oil
products stack up around the world.
Combined with the impact of an insipid U.S. summer driving
season, the drawdown in stocks typical of this time of year has
not happened. The IEA said stocks in developed countries stood
at almost 68 days of forward cover at the end of June.
On Tuesday, weekly stocks data from the American Petroleum
Institute (API) showed an unexpected fall of 1.4 million barrels
in crude stocks, together with a larger-than-expected 2.3
million barrels fall in gasoline stocks. []
But the data, released after Tuesday's prices settlement,
failed to lift the oil market.
"Today traders will be watching the Fed meeting and the EIA
data. The stronger dollar and waning sentiment for equities have
been short-term bearish for crude, which has been trading as an
asset class recently," said Jonathan Kornafel, Asia director of
U.S.-based Hudson Capital Energy.
The EIA, the statistical arm of the U.S. Department of
Energy, will release its own weekly snapshot of U.S. fuel
inventories at 1430 GMT.
Data from the EIA and API can diverge widely.
An expanded Reuters poll of analysts on Tuesday showed
expectations of a 700,000-barrel rise in crude stocks, a
1.3-million-barrel increase in gasoline stocks and a
200,000-barrel drop in distillates stocks.
Traders will also keep a close eye on the two-day U.S.
Federal Reserve meeting that ends later on Wednesday with a
statement expected at about 1815 GMT. []
(Additional reporting by Maryelle Demongeot in Singapore;
Editing by Sue Thomas)