(Refiling to fix story link at end of 4th paragraph)
* EIA reports surprise draw in U.S. crude stocks
* U.S. jobless claims data weighs on crude
* OPEC, as expected, keeps oil output targets intact
* Dollar hits 2010 low against currency basket
* Coming up: U.S. Sept. consumer prices Friday
(Recasts; updates with settlement prices, market activity,
related news)
By Gene Ramos
NEW YORK, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Oil prices fell back below $83
a barrel on Thursday as weak U.S. jobless claims data and
losses on Wall Street outweighed an unexpected drawdown in U.S.
crude stocks and a moderate decline in fuel inventories.
Prices vacillated through the day, briefly topping $84 for
the third time in seven sessions, before succumbing to falling
equity markets amid a mix of factors, including the dollar's
fall to a 2010 low, OPEC's decision to maintain production
quotas and ongoing French port and refinery strikes.
Oil prices broke out of this year's $70 to $80 range last
month as traders anticipated a fresh round of U.S. Federal
Reserve monetary easing that would boost growth prospects and
cut unemployment, but are now stalling around $80 to $85 a
barrel as the market weighs immediate economic conditions
against future policy.
Data released early Thursday showed that new claims for
jobless benefits unexpectedly rose last week, weighing on crude
prices even as they bolstered the case for the central bank to
pump more money into the economy as soon as next month.
[]
U.S. crude for November delivery <CLc1> fell 32 cents to
$82.69 a barrel amid total trading volume of 675,000 lots,
according to preliminary data. In London, ICE November Brent
crude <LCO1> expired at the close and settled down 11 cents at
$84.53 a barrel.
"The weekly EIA report appeared slightly bearish from our
vantage point as stocks drew slightly across the board and the
declines fell a bit short of our expectations," said Jim
Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch & Associates in Galena,
Illinois. "The complex decoupled from the currency factor today
and appeared to latch onto a weakening stock market for
guidance."
CRUDE, PRODUCT STOCKPILES DOWN
U.S. crude inventories dipped by 416,000 barrels last week,
the U.S. Energy Information Administration said, far below the
4.1-million-barrel drawdown reported by the American Petroleum
Institute on Tuesday, but against the forecast in a Reuters
poll for a 1.1-million-barrel increase.
Gasoline stocks fell by 1.8 million barrels, more than
expected, while distillate supplies, which include heating oil
and diesel, dropped by 255,000 barrels, less than forecast.
Oil prices got early support from the U.S. dollar's fall to
its lowest level this year against a basket of currencies.
while the euro rose to an eight-month high. By 3:25 p.m. EDT
(1925 GMT), the dollar was down 0.61 percent against the basket
<.DXY>.
A weak dollar usually lifts oil prices as it makes
dollar-denominated crude cheaper for buyers using other
currencies, lowering the value of greenbacks paid to producers
and attracting investors looking to shift from currencies to
commodities.
The oil market was awaiting Friday's U.S. government data
on consumer prices last month. Also scheduled were data on
retail sales in September and a preliminary reading of consumer
sentiment so far this month.
Also on tap on Friday was a speech by Fed Charman Ben
Bernanke in Boston that could provide clues on what monetary
authorities are planning to do next.
OPEC DECISION
Oil prices were little moved by the decision by the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to keep oil
production levels unchanged, sticking to a policy that has
served it well for nearly two years.
"The biggest challenge we have is to keep the oil market as
it is today," Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said.
A strike at Fos Lavera port in France entered its 18th day
on Thursday -- the longest at the key Mediterranean oil port --
while workers at most refineries were also on strike as part of
stoppages across the country that began on Tuesday over
government pension reforms. []
(Additional reporting by Robert Gibbons in New York,
Christopher Johnson and Emma Farge in London, and Alejandro
Barbajosa in Singapore; Editing by Walter Bagley)