Oil prices slip on Bush warning in Saudi Arabia

LONDON (AFP) — Oil prices fell after US President George W. Bush urged producers to take action over "very high" prices and as US recession fears gathered pace, traders said Tuesday.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in February, was down 10 cents to 94.10 dollars per barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for February shed 30 cents to 92.62 dollars.

President Bush urged oil producers on Tuesday to take action over near record-high prices, broaching a sensitive topic on the second day of talks with OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia.

With fears of recession looming large in the United States, Bush said he would speak to Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah "about the fact that oil prices are very high, which is tough on our economy.

"And that I would hope, as OPEC considers different production levels, that they understand that if ... one of their biggest consumers' economy suffers, it will mean less purchases, less oil and gas sold."

He raised the issue at a meeting of Saudi entrepreneurs a day after his administration said it was taking the first steps in a multi-billion-dollar arms deal with Saudi Arabia, a key US ally in the volatile region.

Bush is on the second day of visit to Saudi Arabia -- the world's largest oil producer -- the latest leg of a tour aimed at countering what he calls the "threat" from Iran and promoting his vision of Middle East peace.

Oil industry experts said the comments from Bush were a "significant" development.

"It's a significant statement because it's President Bush talking to Saudi and so you have the world biggest producer and the biggest consumer talking to each other," said Societe Generale analyst Mike Wittner in London.

He said the Saudis wanted to strike a balance between high oil prices and steady economic growth.

"On one hand, they (Saudi Arabia) want to maximize revenues but at the same time, in order to sell oil, they need healthy demand and healthy demand depends on a healthy economy ... so they cannot push prices too high."

Crude prices soared to 100 dollars at the start of the year, piling pressure on the US economy which has become a key issue in the campaign for the November presidential election.

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is due to meet in Vienna on February 1 amid pressure to calm prices after shrugging off calls to increase output at its last meeting in December.

"I don't think that Opec will increase production at the next meeting," Wittner said.

"They are very careful about adding more supply to a market where demand is already uncertain."

The Saudi-led OPEC cartel pumps about 40 percent of world oil supplies but restricts output of its members through a quota system that is reviewed at regular meetings.

OPEC insists that high oil prices are being driven by speculative buying and that increasing supplies would not have an impact on the market price.

Crude had jumped higher on Monday amid tensions in key crude producers Iran and Nigeria that had offset concerns that US oil demand could decline amid economic uncertainty, traders said.

However, Bank of Ireland analyst Paul Harris cautioned: "(The) prospects for the US economy will play a part in capping the upside."

Harris said geopolitical concerns in key crude producers Iran and Nigeria should continue to help underpin oil prices.