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Oil prices near flat as need worries balance out Middle East danger

Oil rates were little changed on Tuesday for a 2nd straight day as unpredictability about the pace of potential U.S. rates of interest cuts and the influence on fuel need offset stress over Middle East tensions that might interfere with supply.

Brent futures edged 1 cent lower $81.99 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude increased 1 cent to $ 76.93 a barrel.

Oil costs were near flat in Monday's trade as well, after gaining 6% recently.

The conflict in the Middle East has kept costs raised.

On Monday, Israel released 2 Israeli-Argentine hostages held by Hamas in Rafah in a ferocious rescue operation that killed 74 Palestinians in the southern Gaza city where about one million civilians have looked for refuge from months of bombardments.

However limiting gains were worries about rates of interest.

The New york city Fed said its January Survey of Consumer Expectations showed the outlook for inflation a year and five years from now were unchanged, with both staying above the Fed's 2% target rate.

That if inflation worries delay Fed interest rate cuts might lower oil demand by slowing financial growth.

U.S. inflation information is anticipated on Tuesday, while British inflation and euro zone Gross Domestic Product (GDP) information need to arrive on Wednesday.

Market participants waited for industry information in the future Tuesday on U.S. crude stocks. 4 analysts polled estimated on average that crude inventories increased by about 2.6 million barrels in the week to Feb. 9.

(source: Reuters)