Oil prices were lower in Asia Thursday as traders took stock of weak fundamentals in the market, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for December delivery, shed 70 cents to 79.70 dollars a barrel in afternoon trade.
Brent North Sea crude for December delivery slipped 68 cents to 78.21 dollars.
Prices eased after breaking through the 80-dollar mark in New York on Wednesday, reflecting concerns over demand, analysts said.
"The fundamentals of the markets are still weak... and there are no signs of steadily growing demand," said Jason Feer, Asia-Pacific vice-president of energy market analysts Argus Media in Singapore.
He added that data released by the US Department of Energy (DoE) on Wednesday showing an unexpected dip in US crude reserves was "overall not that much" in the larger scheme of prices.
The DoE announced that crude reserves in the world's largest energy consumer sank by four million barrels in the week ending October 30, surprising analysts, who were expecting a rise.
Oil prices have climbed amid a commodities rally that has seen gold futures strike a series of record highs.
The price of gold surged to a peak in the wake of the International Monetary Fund's massive sale of the precious metal to India.
Gold and other commodity prices have climbed in recent months amid a move away from the dollar, which has been slumping. The move accelerated last month on a report that Gulf states may stop using the greenback for oil trading.
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