* Dollar broadly weaker, supportive to oil
* US stocks up on BOJ, service sector data, lifting oil
* Coming up: EIA oil inventory data, 10:30 a.m. EDT Wed (Recasts, updates with settlement prices, market activity)
By Robert Gibbons
NEW YORK, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Oil prices hit a five-month peak near $83 a barrel on Tuesday, boosted by a slumping dollar after a Bank of Japan rate cut and by tanker disruptions because of a French strike and a closed Texan shipping route.
The BOJ pledged to pump more funds into the economy and keep interest rates near zero [
], pressuring the dollar [ ] and boosting equities on expectations other central banks will also act to stimulate their economies.A weaker dollar can raise oil prices because it makes dollar-denominated oil less expensive for consumers using other currencies and lowers the value of dollars paid to producers.
U.S. crude for November <CLc1> delivery rose $1.35 or 1.66 percent to $82.82 per barrel, the highest settlement since closing at $86.19 on May 3. The $82.99 intraday peak was the highest since May 4's $86.24.
ICE Brent November crude <LCOc1> rose $1.56 to settle at $84.84 a barrel.
"The complex continued its upward spiral into new multi-week high territory again today with the assistance of the strongest euro levels since last winter and an upside acceleration in the stock market," Jim Ritterbusch, president at Ritterbusch & Associates, said in a research note.
U.S. stocks rallied and the S&P 500 index hit its highest level since mid-May on encouraging U.S. services-sector data and with investors reassured by new steps by Japan and Australia's central banks to fight economic weakness. [
]TANKER TRAFFIC JAMS
Shipping disruptions caused by striking French workers and a downed power line on the Houston Ship Channel gave a lift to crude oil and refined products prices.
Striking employees at France's top oil port were deadlocked with management, with about 30 vessels carrying crude and oil products blocked at Fos-Lavera near the Mediterranean port of Marseille. [
]The strike has trimmed fuel output at six French refineries, boosting European benchmark gasoline barge prices and helping U.S. gasoline <RBc1> and heating oil <HOc1> futures close at their highest levels since August. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For graphic on refineries supplied from Fos-Lavera; http://r.reuters.com/zar46p For a FACTBOX on the Fos-Lavera oil hub:[
] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>The shut portion of the Houston Ship Channel will not reopen before Wednesday morning, the U.S. Coast Guard said. Shut since Sunday, 11 inbound tankers were waiting to transit the channel, it said. [
]OIL INVENTORIES
Oil traders will be focusing on the week's reports on U.S. oil inventories. An expanded Reuters survey of analysts on Tuesday forecast U.S. crude stocks rose 300,000 barrels in the week to Oct. 1, with gasoline stocks little changed, down only 200,000 barrels. [
]Supplies of distillates, including heating oil and diesel fuel, were projected to have declined by 800,000 barrels.
Ahead of the inventory data, MasterCard delivered a mixed picture for gasoline demand, reporting that it increased last week from the previous week but fell year-on-year. [
]The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, will issue its weekly oil inventory report on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT), followed by the U.S. Energy Information Administration's report on Wednesday morning. (Additional reporting by Gene Ramos in New York, Christopher Johnson in London and Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson)