* U.S. crude oil stocks fall 7.3 million barrels - API
* For a technical view, click [
]* Coming Up: EIA U.S. inventory report at 1500 GMT
(Updates throughout, changes dateline, pvs SINGAPORE)
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON, July 8 (Reuters) - Oil rose to around $75 per barrel on Thursday, supported by a rally in stock markets and an industry report showing a sharp fall in crude oil inventories in the United States, the world's biggest oil consumer.
The euro surged to a two-month high and Asian stocks climbed to their highest in more than a week on Thursday after a bullish forecast from State Street <STT.N> fuelled optimism about the coming U.S. earnings season and underpinned growing tolerance for risk, sending Wall Street higher. [
] [ ]U.S. crude oil futures for August <CLc1> rose as much as $1.03 to $75.10 a barrel, the highest intraday price since July 1, and were up 55 cents at $74.62 by 0845 GMT. ICE Brent crude for August <LCOc1> rose 44 cents to $73.95.
Oil prices are still more than $12 below their 19-month peak above $87 reached in early May, although they have rebounded sharply from a trough below $65 on May 20.
"Friendly equity markets are supporting sentiment with rises in Asia and Europe showing a return of risk appetite," said Eugen Weinberg, commodity analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
"U.S. inventory data is also very supportive and it will be interesting to see if the government figures confirm the API figures when they come out later today," Weinberg said.
The American Petroleum Institute (API) said in a report late on Wednesday that U.S. crude oil inventories tumbled 7.3 million barrels last week, more than three times the expected drop.
STORM WARNING
Government statistics on U.S. oil inventories and demand from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) follow the API data on Thursday at 1500 GMT. [
]Expectations are for crude stockpiles to have dropped 2.3 million barrels, according to a Reuters survey.
Stockpiles fell after Hurricane Alex forced some producers in the U.S. Gulf to curb production and Mexico to close loading terminals that send most of their output to U.S. refiners.
A tropical depression has formed over the northwestern Gulf of Mexico and is heading towards the Texas-Mexico border, a region still recovering from Alex, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. [
]A tropical storm warning was issued in the lower Rio Grande valley along the border, from south of Baffin Bay, Texas to Rio San Fernando, Mexico. The warning signalled the storm could make landfall within the next 24 hours. The expected course takes the weather system away from main oil-producing regions of the Gulf.
Gasoline stocks fell 191,000 barrels, the API said, in line with analysts' projections, while distillates including heating oil and diesel fell 1 million barrels, contrary to a forecast for a 1.4 million-barrel gain. [
]Other data was also supportive.
The International Monetary Fund raised its 2010 global growth forecast on Thursday, citing an expansion in Asia and in U.S. private demand. The IMF upgraded its 2010 global output growth forecast to 4.6 percent from 4.2 percent after a fall of 0.6 percent in 2009. [
]The IMF said a double-dip recession was unlikely.
On Wednesday, the EIA raised its 2010 world oil demand growth forecast by 60,000 barrels per day from its previous estimate. The EIA now expects world oil demand to climb by 1.56 million bpd in 2010 to 85.82 million bpd from a year earlier.
Nearly all the growth in world oil consumption this year will come from outside the major industrialised countries, led by China, Saudi Arabia and Brazil, it said. [
] (Additional reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa; editing by William Hardy)