* Equities rise, dollar slips after Dubai worries wane
* Chinese business surveys at peaks, signals rosy outlook
* U.S. fuel data expected to show steady crude stocks (Updates prices)
By Edward McAllister
NEW YORK, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Oil climbed more than $1 toward $79 a barrel on Tuesday, lifted by solid manufacturing data from China and a weaker dollar.
U.S. crude for January delivery <CLc1> rose $1.47 to $78.75 a barrel by 12:54 p.m. EST (1754 GMT). Brent crude <LCOc1> added $1.22 to $79.69.
Business surveys in China showed that the world's second-largest energy consumer has largely recovered from the global economic downturn, laying the foundations for solid expansion in 2010. [
]"Crude and product futures rose for a second day after a report showed that manufacturing activity in China advanced at the fastest pace in five years in November," Addison Armstrong, analyst at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut, said in a research note.
Investors have looked to wider macro economic data in recent months for signs of economic recovery and a potential rebound in energy demand.
U.S. stocks rose, buoyed by hopes of economic recovery. Data showed pending sales of previously owned U.S. homes rose more than expected to their highest level in 3-1/2 years in October. [
]A weaker dollar also provided support as waning worries about Dubai's debt helped dim the greenback's safe haven appeal. A weaker dollar makes dollar-denominated commodities like crude cheaper for holders of other currencies and tends to support prices.
The catalyst for the easing concern about Dubai's debt was an announcement on Monday from Dubai World, center of the debt storm, that its planned restructuring of some units involved $26 billion in debt.
"It looks like sentiment, primarily relief from Dubai, because overall supply and demand has not changed," said Joseph Arsenio, Managing Director at Arsenio Capital Management in Larkspur, California, on crude's rise.
The American Petroleum Institute's weekly U.S. crude inventory report will be released later on Tuesday. Crude stockpiles were unchanged this week, according to a preliminary Reuters poll. [
]Oil has rallied from below $33 last December but has held in a narrow band of $70 to $82 over the past two months. Some analysts see little chance that would push prices above the range given ample supplies and little sign of strengthening demand.
"We see little impetus for a break to the upside, even if economic indicators surprise to the upside this week," Credit Suisse analysts said in a research note.
"The inventory overhang in the diesel and heating oil markets should prevent prices from breaking higher for the time being." (Additional reporting by Robert Gibbons and Gene Ramos in New York, Alex Lawler in London and Fayen Wong in Perth; editing by Marguerita Choy) ((Edward.mcallister@thomsonreuters.com; +1 646 223 6221; Reuters Messaging:edward.mcallister.reuters.com@reuters.net))