Brent futures posted light gains to hold above USD 103 a barrel on Friday, supported by a sharp fall in the dollar and expectations the Federal Reserve will stick with its stimulus, setting the contract on course for the biggest weekly gain since late April.
Also read: World stocks shaky ahead of US jobs data
All eyes are on US employment data due later in the day to gauge the health of the world's biggest economy. Though initial numbers on Thursday pointed to moderate jobs growth, labour conditions appear to lack the vigour to compel the Fed to scale back its stimulus, ensuring investors have enough capital to pour into assets such as oil and other commodities.
Brent crude gained 13 cents to USD 103.74 a barrel by 0426 GMT, while US oil rose five cents to USD 94.81. Both contracts are set for their biggest weekly gain since the week ended April 26, with the European benchmark poised to rise 3.3 percent and its US counterpart three percent.
A drop in the US currency supported oil prices with the dollar index hitting three-month lows in the previous session and remaining weak in Asian trade.
"Investors should look at dollar trades more than supply-demand factors for oil," said Tetsu Emori, a commodity fund manager with Astmax Investments in Tokyo.
"In the long-term I agree that the dollar will strengthen as the Fed rolls back stimulus, but for now the dollar seems overbought and we are seeing some unwinding of positions."
For Brent, USD 100 is a key support level and USD 105 an important psychological resistance, Emori said. The trading range for US oil will be between USD 93 and USD 95 a barrel, with USD 98 providing the next key resistance, he said.
The Fed's policy-setting committee meets June 18-19. With data ranging from manufacturing to consumer spending showing the economy hit a soft patch early in the second quarter, it is unlikely the US central bank will announce a tapering of the USD 85 billion in bonds it is buying each month at that meeting.
Brent was also supported by news that the Buzzard oilfield in the UK North Sea has suffered a production outage, the second in less than a week. Buzzard had restarted earlier this week following an equipment failure. The field's normal production is about 200,000 barrels per day.
Brent faces a resistance at USD 103.98, a break above which will make a target at USD 105.31 available, while US oil is expected to test a resistance at USD 95.68, according to Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao.
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