* US Q4 GDP forecast to have grown 4.6 pct vs 2.2 pct in Q3
* US jobless claims fell less than expected last week
* Oil trading near 2010 lows
By Alejandro Barbajosa
SINGAPORE, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Oil rose past $74 a barrel on Friday as investors focused on U.S. gross domestic product data for the fourth quarter that is expected to show strong growth.
The world's largest economy probably grew at an annual rate of 4.6 percent, up from 2.2 percent in the third quarter, a Reuters poll showed before data is published later on Friday. [
]U.S. jobless claims fell less than expected last week, the government reported on Thursday. President Barack Obama said in the State of the Union address on Wednesday that job creation would be his top priority.
"Even though the U.S. economy is growing, the key figure is the unemployment rate," said Clarence Chu, an energy trader at Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore.
"Until I see that the U.S. is consistently creating jobs for a few months in a row, I'm not convinced that demand will increase."
U.S. Oil demand shrank 2 percent in the past four weeks.
U.S. oil for March delivery <CLc1> gained 37 cents to $74.01 a barrel at 0310 GMT. Prices touched $72.65 on Wednesday, the lowest intra-day price since Dec. 21, and are still down 12 percent from a 15-month high of just under $84 on Jan. 11.
London ICE Brent crude for March <LCOc1> climbed 32 cents to $72.45.
Prices fell on Thursday after the U.S. dollar rose to its highest level in more than six months against the euro, which fell on concern over potential fiscal crises in European economies including Greece and Portugal. [
]A stronger dollar often indicates investors are funneling cash away from riskier assets such as commodities. It also can curb demand for crude oil from buyers who hold other currencies, since oil is priced in dollars.
Oil use in OECD countries will never return to 2006 and 2007 levels because of more fuel efficiency and the use of alternatives, International Energy Agency chief economist Fatih Birol told Reuters on Thursday.
"I would expect that the oil price will trade within the current range for the remainder of this year, (at) $60-80 per barrel," BP <BP.L> chief executive Tony Hayward said on Thursday on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum gathering in the Davos Swiss ski resort.
Thursday's U.S. economic data cast further doubt over the pace of economic recovery. More people claimed for jobless benefits and durable goods orders increased less than expected in December. [
]"If you may lose your job next month, you are not going to spend, buy a house, buy a car; you try to save as much as possible," Chu said. "That is not helping the whole sentiment. I am bearish in the near future."
OPEC discipline in reducing output over the past 15 months is helping reduce an inventory surplus. Floating storage of crude and products has been declining and currently stands at between 75 million and 80 million barrels, Barclays Capital said.
"In a world where, in our view, $70 per barrel is increasingly being looked at as being a barely sustainable minimum, current prices are not generating much in the way of excess rents," Barclays Capital analysts headed by Paul Horsnell said in a report on Thursday.
"Key producing countries are increasingly signalling that $70 per barrel is a borderline below which, if sustained, the commitment to maintain capacity cannot be taken for granted," Barclays Capital said. (With additional reporting by Alex Lawler in London)