SINGAPORE—Oil prices eased in Asian trade Friday  on growing fears about the eurozone's debt troubles but the falls were  tempered by worries about the nuclear standoff between the West and  Iran, analysts said.
 New York's main contract,  West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in July was down two cents to  $90.64 per barrel while Brent North Sea crude for July shed 23 cents to  $106.32 in the afternoon.
 "Oil prices continue  to decline as macroeconomic sentiment continues to weaken, with the lack  of concrete measures on the part of European policymakers to address  the Greek issue," Barclays Bank said in a commentary.
  It said the lack of a policy response to Greece's possible exit from  the euro was "weighing significantly across all risk assets."
  Shortly after a European Union summit that ended Thursday failed to  produce a conclusive plan on dealing with Athens, a May survey of  eurozone business confidence showed the sharpest monthly fall for nearly  three years.
 A Greek general election set for  June 17 is expected to result in a win for anti-austerity parties who  have said they will tear up a bailout deal with the European Union and  International Monetary Fund.
 Such a move would  in effect lead to the country's euro exit, which analysts warn could  have disastrous knock-on effects for the global economy.
  Investors are also keeping close watch on the nuclear row between Iran  and the West after talks between the two sides ended on Thursday with  few results except to fix a date to meet again next month.
  P5+1 nations–Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus  Germany–had laid out a new package of proposals to persuade Iran to  suspend uranium enrichment, which was flatly rejected by Tehran  officials.
 Iran has faced a raft of sanctions  from the international community over its nuclear program, seen by many  as a guise for atomic weapons push.
 Iran has insisted that the program is for purely peaceful purposes.
"Getting Iran to the table is one thing, getting them to back down is quite another," said Justin Harper, market strategist at IG Markets Singapore. —Agence France-Presse
source: gmanetwork.com
