Benchmark oil for October delivery rose $1.18 to close at $105.03 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Oil fell $3.61 a barrel, or 3.6 percent, over the first three days of the week mostly due to expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will start phasing out its monetary stimulus, possibly starting next month. The manufacturing data overrode those concerns, at least for a day.
The eurozone's purchasing managers' index, a key gauge of growth in both the manufacturing and services sectors, rose to 51.7 points in August from 50.4 in July, according to financial information company Markit. It was the highest reading since June 2011 and supported expectations that the eurozone's recovery from recession is gaining momentum.
As for China, HSBC Corp. said the preliminary version of its monthly purchasing managers index for Chinese manufacturing rose to 50.1 for August, a sharp improvement from July's figure of 47.7.
Meanwhile, drivers in most parts of the U.S. continue to pay less at the gas station than a year ago. The nationwide average for a gallon of gasoline held steady at $3.54. That's down 19 cents from this time last year.
Prices are higher in some Mountain States such as Wyoming (up 12 cents) and Idaho (up 16 cents), but drivers are paying more than 30 cents less in states such as Illinois (down 36 cents) and Wisconsin (down 34 cents).
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