Oil prices slip away from five-month highs as Japan's industry stutters

Japanese industrial output fell 0.3 percent in March adding to mounting evidence of an export-driven economy struggling to regain momentum amid slowing global growth.

Singapore: Oil prices slipped away from five-month highs in early Asian trading on Thursday as Japanese factory output weakened for the second straight month.

Japanese industrial output fell 0.3 percent in March adding to mounting evidence of an export-driven economy struggling to regain momentum amid slowing global growth.

Brent crude futures dropped 41 cents from their last settlement to $65.43 a barrel by 0105 GMT. U.S. WTI crude was down 13 cents at $58.45 a barrel.

The drops followed a session in which prices hit five-month highs after the first crude stock draw in almost half a year at the US Cushing hub.

"Brent and WTI prices closed at the highest level in nearly five months as U.S. crude oil inventories rose by just 1.9 million barrels (compared to more than 5.5 million barrels the previous week)," ANZ bank said on Thursday.

"WTI prices outperformed Brent as crude oil stocks at key US storage hub Cushing fell for the first time in five months," it added.

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