* Dollar index <.DXY> hits 10-week high as euro slumps
* Japan factory output disappoints as stimulus fades
* Technicals: prices may retrace to $84.50 [
]* Coming Up: U.S. API oil inventory report; 2130 GMT
(Updates throughout, previous SINGAPORE)
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Oil fell to around $85 on Tuesday, consolidating as the dollar hit a 10-week high and the euro fell on worries over the European debt crisis and concerns China may raise interest rates and cap energy demand growth.
Traders were also looking for more evidence that U.S. oil inventories would drain with a surge in demand for heating as wintry weather swept across Europe and the United States.
Oil prices climbed 2.4 percent on Monday, led by futures of distillate heating fuels including gas oil, as cold weather raised expectations of higher fuel consumption.
U.S. crude for January <CLc1> fell 60 cents to $85.13 a barrel by 0934 GMT after rising $1.97 on Monday, when it briefly touched $85.90, the highest price since Nov. 12. Prices reached a 25-month high of $88.63 on Nov. 11.
ICE Brent <LCOc1> lost 50 cents to $86.84 after rising more than 2 percent on Monday.
The dollar index against a basket of currencies reached its highest level since mid-September as the euro <EUR=> tumbled on continuing fears that Ireland's bailout might not help keep Europe's debt woes contained. [
]"Oil rose on Monday on the cold weather but the dollar is also rising and oil cannot continue to defy gravity forever," said Carsten Fritsch, commodity analyst at Commerzbank.
"Oil prices should remain under pressure but will may not move decisively until we get the U.S. oil inventory data."
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U.S. INVENTORIES
An industry report on inventories from the American Petroleum Institutes (API) is due on Tuesday at 2130 GMT, followed by government statistics from the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday.
U.S. crude oil inventories probably fell by 400,000 barrels last week as imports dipped, a Reuters poll of analysts suggested, but analysts were divided with an equal number of them predicting a decline and an increase. [
]Cold temperatures in the Northeast United States and northwestern Europe provided a boost to London gas oil <LGOc1> and U.S. heating oil <HOc1> distillate futures on Monday as the U.S. December refined products contracts neared their Tuesday expiration. [
]China's key stock index fell 1.6 percent to close at a seven-week low on Tuesday, with a shortfall of cash in the domestic money market creating a liquidity squeeze in the stock market. [
] [ ]Analysts said the drying up of cash in the market was prompting speculative retail investors, already on edge about whether the central bank would introduce further tightening measures, to sell heavily weighted financials and commodity issues.
Factories in Japan and South Korea, Asia's second- and fourth-largest oil users, cut output in October, adding to evidence of a slowdown and boding ill for the rest of the world that has relied on the region to keep the global economy humming. [
]OPEC president Ecuador joined a number of other oil producers on Monday in signalling tolerance for higher prices, saying crude could rise to $90 a barrel without endangering the world economy if growth picks up. [
] (Additional reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore; editing by William Hardy)