* U.S. June nonfarm payrolls drop, pressure oil
* Prices head for biggest weekly drop since early May
* Coming up: CFTC positions report at 3:30 p.m. EDT
(Recasts, updates prices, market activity, changes byline, moves dateline from previous LONDON)
By Robert Gibbons
NEW YORK, July 2 (Reuters) - Crude oil prices fell on Friday as a larger-than-expected decline in June U.S. nonfarm payrolls added to mounting concerns about a faltering economic recovery.
U.S. crude oil futures <CLc1> fell $1.03, or 1.41 percent, to $71.92 a barrel by 12:03 p.m. EDT (1603 GMT). The $71.70 intraday low was the weakest since prices fell to $70.75 on June 8.
ICE Brent crude oil futures <LCOc1> fell 70 cents to $71.64.
Oil prices seesawed initially after the Labor Department reported that U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell 125,000 in June, more than expected and the first decline of 2010, but with the unemployment rate falling to 9.5 percent, from 9.7 percent in May. [
]Private sector jobs rose 83,000, less than forecast but more than May's 33,000 tepid rise. Jobs were expected to have fallen 110,000, according to a Reuters survey.
"With all the gloom and doom before the report you could say it wasn't as bad as it could have been, but it's probably not a positive for the economy and that's the way the crude market is looking at it right now," said Robert Yawger, senior vice president, energy futures at MF Global in New York.
"Demand could get hit a bit," he added.
Adding to the anxiety about the economy, the government later reported U.S. factory products orders fell more than expected in May, the first decline in nine months and the steepest drop since March 2009. [
]The weak U.S. dollar helped limit the initial decline after the employment numbers. The dollar slipped against the euro, extending Thursday's steep losses.
U.S. stocks fell, with the Dow Jones industrial average dropping 1 percent, amid large declines in banking and consumer shares on the weak jobs report. [
]Trading sources also noted lighter trading volume ahead of the U.S. Independence Day holiday weekend as a factor in the choppy trading, with volume for U.S. front-month crude only nearing 167,000 at midday in New York.
Prompt U.S. crude has fallen every day this week and is on course for a slide of more than 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. (Graphic: http://link.reuters.com/gyp55m )
Oil fell more than 3 percent on Thursday, its biggest one-day slide in nearly four weeks, as weak manufacturing data from China and the United States fueled mounting worry that the global economic recovery could stall and even slip back into recession. (Additional reporting by Gene Ramos in New York, Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore and Ikuko Kurahone in London; Editing by David Gregorio)