Oil prices were mixed in Asian trade Wednesday with dealers nervously monitoring the crippling budget impasse in Washington as the deadline for raising the debt ceiling approaches.
Oil prices were mixed in Asian trade Wednesday with dealers nervously monitoring the crippling budget impasse in Washington as the deadline for raising the debt ceiling approaches.
New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in November, was down two cents at $101.19 a barrel in afternoon trade, while Brent North Sea crude for November gained four cents to $110.00 a barrel.
With just over a day before the US government begins to run short of money to pay its bills, there was no clear sign of a deal in Washington late Tuesday to reopen the federal government and raise the country's borrowing limit.
If Congress fails to raise the debt ceiling before midnight Wednesday (0400 GMT Thursday) the US Treasury would begin to run out of money to meet its obligations and slip towards a historic debt default that analysts fear will cause deep damage to the global economy.
Stalled talks in Congress triggered a fall on Wall Street Tuesday, while rating agency Fitch placed the country's AAA rating on watch for a possible downgrade.
The "market is showing increasing signs of unease amid another day of stalled progress on debt ceiling talks", French bank Credit Agricole said in a note.
"Although 17th October is not necessarily the date that the US defaults on its debt, it nevertheless will be the crucial date that investors have in mind," it added.
"Tension is building up as we approach this deadline, and talks of hope and progress, rather than concrete deals, might not be enough to keep sentiment from deteriorating."