* Front-month crude up almost 4 percent in 1st quarter
* U.S. crude stockpiles up by less than expected-API
* Coming Up: Wednesday EIA inventory report 1430 GMT
(Updates prices)
By Chris Baldwin
LONDON, March 31 (Reuters) - Oil rose more than $1 to above $83 a barrel on Wednesday after U.S. employment data showed an unexpected drop in private sector jobs, but pared gains as markets awaited U.S. crude inventory data later in the day.
Front-month crude futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange <CLc1> have gained almost 4 percent so far this year, trading up 99 cents at $83.36 a barrel at 1300 GMT.
Brent crude for May <LCOc1> rose 98 cents to $82.26.
The U.S. shed 23,000 jobs in March, against expectations for a rise of 40,000 private-sector jobs, a report by private employment service ADP showed on Wednesday. [
]Following the ADP data, the dollar pared gains from a three-month high against the yen [
], European shares turned negative < > and copper <CMCU3> eased to $7,800 a tonne."The dollar dropped a little on those ADP numbers. That's bad news for markets, so the dollar drops, equities drop, commodities drop," said James Hughes, analyst at CMC Markets.
A weakening dollar normally tends to make commodities priced in the U.S. currency cheaper for investors holding other currencies.
A Reuters poll of 14 analysts showed U.S. crude oil inventories likely rose last week for the ninth straight time. Weekly government statistics from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) will follow at 1430 GMT. [
]U.S. oil demand in the past few weeks has posted its first year-on-year gain in 18 months, while Chinese imports are surging, reflecting sustained growth for the world's top two oil users.
Oil-product inventories in the U.S. have been shrinking. Stockpiles of distillate fuels including heating oil and diesel fell by 1 million barrels last week to 147.5 million barrels, the industry-funded American Petroleum Institute (API) reported on Tuesday. [
]"Given what the API put out last night you've got to guess that the (EIA) news will be the same. Otherwise it's all eyes on any significant developments in financial markets, particularly the dollar," said broker Tony Machacek at Bache Commodities.
QUARTERLY GROWTH
After the biggest annual rise in 36 years in 2009, most commodities continued to rebound on general optimism that the economy is recovering and demand for raw materials will continue to improve.
In addition, many commodities have posted strong sales to China, the largest consumer of many goods such as base metals and food staples.
For a graphic on commodities Q! performance, see: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/310/CMD_Q1PRF0310.gif
Oil prices this quarter have traded from a peak of $83.95 in January, the highest since October 2008 at the height of the financial crisis, to a low of $69.50 a barrel in February.
That sub-$15 range is more stable than the wide price swings in the previous two years. Implied volatility for U.S. crude is now at its lowest level since prices surged to a record $147.27 a barrel on July 11, 2008, before plummeting to $32.40 in December of that year.
For a graphic of crude implied volatility, see: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/RSW_20103103115220.jpg
OPEC officials meeting in Cancun, Mexico will complete a two-day meeting against a backdrop of price stabilisation around $80 per barrel, but showed no signs of clear consensus on how to respond if prices were to rise further. [
] (Additional reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore, editing by James Jukwey)