(Adds fund manager comment, Algeria comment, updates prices)
By Jane Merriman
LONDON, March 4 (Reuters) - Oil was steady on Tuesday after it reached a record of almost $104 a barrel in the previous session, buoyed by investor demand for commodities as well as expectations OPEC will not increase supply despite high prices.
U.S. light crude for April delivery <CLc1> was up 10 cents at $102.55 a barrel by 1509 GMT, after touching a record high of $103.95 on Monday.
Prices retreated from the peak later on Monday to settle 61 cents higher at $102.45.
London Brent crude <LCOc1> was up 2 cents at $100.50.
"Investors concerned about inflation and the outlook for the U.S. dollar have preferred to park their money in other assets and commodities have been a principal beneficiary of this trend," said David Dugdale of MFC Global Investment Management.
The dollar recovered slightly from a run of record lows against the euro <EUR=> and a basket of currencies on Tuesday after European officials said they were concerned about excessive exchange rate moves. [
]
REAL ASSETS
The risk that inflation could be on the rise has increased the attractions of "real assets" such as gold, metals and oil.
Gold <XAU=> seems likely to touch $1,000 an ounce, while platinum has hit a record for the second day in a row [
] and copper has risen 26 percent since the start of this year. [ ]But there are also views that the impact of investor flows on the oil price has been exaggerated.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs say increased fund activity has only played a modest part in oil's rise.
"We maintain that the recent oil price rally has been largely fundamentally driven and that the fund buying is more likely the result of rising prices rather than the primary cause," they said in a research note.
Most comments from oil ministers gathering for a meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna on Wednesday suggest the oil producer group will not raise output despite calls from the United States for more oil.
"I don't think OPEC would consider increasing production because then we would be increasing to meet demand that doesn't exist," OPEC President Chakib Khelil said. [
]But Khelil, speaking in his capacity as Algerian oil minister, said he favoured a cut in output. "I would prefer to lower production, as Algerian minister." [
]A Reuters survey found OPEC output fell slightly in February, its first decline in six months, reflecting the view by some analysts that OPEC members are trimming production to prepare for seasonally lower demand in spring. [
]Latest U.S. government data on domestic fuel stocks look set to support OPEC's assertion that supplies are plentiful.
U.S. crude oil inventories are forecast to have risen last week for the eighth week in a row, according to a preliminary poll by Reuters. Analysts predict a 2.5 million-barrel increase in crude stocks, a drop of 1.8 million barrels in distillates and a 300,000-barrel build in gasoline stocks, already at a 14-year high. [
]. The data is due on Wednesday. (Additional reporting by Maryelle Demongeot in Singapore, editing by Anthony Barker)