* Prices head for biggest weekly drop since early May
* For a technical view, click: [
]* Coming Up: U.S. June non-farm payrolls; 1230 GMT
(Previous SINGAPORE, recast, update prices)
By Ikuko Kurahone
LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) - Oil inched up to above $73 a barrel on Friday, bouncing from about a three week low hit on Thrusday, but the market remained preoccupied by concerns over the global economy.
With worries of a double-dip recession uppermost in investors' minds, U.S. jobs data due later will be watched for fresh clues on the strength of the recovery.
By 0845 GMT, U.S. crude oil futures <CLc1> rose 15 cents to $73.10 a barrel, after touching $72.05 on Thursday, the lowest intraday price since June 9. ICE Brent crude oil futures <LCOc1> were 19 cents higher at $72.53.
Prompt U.S. crude had fallen every day this week and is on course for a slide of over 7 percent on the week, its biggest weekly drop in percentage terms since early May, when the European debt crisis hit markets and prompted a 13 percent drop.
"The market still needs to see strong signs of recovery to move higher," said Ken Hasegawa, a commodity derivatives manager at brokerage Newedge in Japan. "If the jobs number is bad, prices will extend losses toward $70."
The non-farm jobs data from the United States, the world's top economy and energy consumer, will be released at 1230 GMT.
Economists forecast a loss of 110,000 jobs in June compared with an increase of 431,000 jobs in May, partly skewed by a drop off in temporary workers hired in May to complete the census. [
]Private payrolls are seen up 112,000, compared with plus 41,000 in May with the unemployment rate at 9.8 percent from 9.7 the previous month. [
].The dollar steadied on Friday after steep losses the previous day. MSCI's all-country world stock index was up 0.2 percent, about 8 percent lower than it was when a short rally began petering out on June 21.[
] [ ]A better-than-expected jobs report could spark a bout of short-covering and provide a bounce for equities and oil ahead of the long U.S. Independence Day weekend.
But a weak report could benefit the U.S. dollar for risk aversion. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For a graphic for non-farm payrolls
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/10/US_NFPP0610.gif
For a graphic showing oil's weekly price changes: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ABE_20100207131004.jpg
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
Hurricane Alex dissipated over central Mexico, having spared most oil facilities in the Gulf of Mexico.
Producers on Thursday were already restarting some of the 421,350 barrels per day (bpd) of oil output, about a quarter of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico total, that were shut as a precaution. [
](Reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore and Ikuko Kurahone in London; editing by Keiron Henderson)