* U.S. light crude not far off 2010 intraday low of $72.65
* U.S. Q4 GDP growth data due at 8:30 a.m. EST (1330 GMT)
* Reuters poll sees U.S. GDP up 4.6 pct vs 2.2 pct in Q3
* U.S., Japanese data point to lower oil consumption
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Oil steadied between $73 and $74 per barrel on Friday, pausing after its third consecutive weekly drop on evidence fuel demand was lacklustre despite the global recovery from recession.
The market awaited U.S. economic growth data at 8:30 a.m. EST (1330 GMT) for any signs that consumption in the world's biggest oil consumer was recovering.
U.S. oil demand shrank 2 percent in the past four weeks from a year earlier, figures this week said, while Japanese data showed crude imports fell 2.6 percent in December and gasoline sales tumbled 2.4 percent. [
]U.S. oil for March delivery <CLc1> gained 33 cents to $73.97 a barrel by 0930 GMT. Prices touched $72.65 on Wednesday, the lowest intra-day price since Dec. 21, and are down more than 10 percent from a 15-month high of just under $84 on Jan. 11.
London ICE Brent crude for March <LCOc1> climbed 38 cents to $72.51.
"Oil is pausing for breath after quite a big fall over the last few weeks," said Eugen Weinberg, commodities analyst at Commerzbank. "But the mood has changed with traders now looking for reasons to sell instead of reasons to buy."
"Current prices do not reflect the fundamentals of demand and supply and could go a lot lower, although I think we will see some stabilisation before the next move downwards."
"DOCTOR COPPER"
Weinberg said he was concerned that the oil market could see a big drop similar to the move in copper this week.
Copper, known as "Doctor Copper" due to its value as a forward indicator of economic activity because it is used for construction and in industrial processes, dropped nearly 5 percent in London on Thursday and saw follow-through selling in Asia on Friday. [
]Traders are concerned that China may tighten monetary policy sharply later this year, choking off global growth.
Edward Meir, senior commodity analyst at brokers MF Global in Connecticut, said he was concerned that a selling frenzy similar to the one that hit copper on Thursday could engulf oil "particularly given the still sizable net long position held by the funds in the (U.S.) crude contract".
"Our feeling is that it will not, given Thursday's rather encouraging session where funds refused to bail out, this despite weaker equities, crashing metal prices, and a much stronger dollar," Meir said.
He suggested oil could in fact stabilise or rally over the next two days, possibly back to the high $70s per barrel.
Key to sentiment on Friday will be the U.S. growth data.
A Reuters poll said the U.S. economy probably grew at its fastest pace in nearly four years in the fourth quarter of last year as businesses rebounded from the deep recession of a year before and made less-aggressive cutbacks on inventories.
It forecast the U.S. economy grew at an annual rate of 4.6 percent in the October-December period, up from 2.2 percent in the third quarter. [
]Oil prices have been helped lower this week by a stronger dollar, which rose to its highest level in more than six months against the euro on concerns over potential fiscal crises in European economies including Greece and Portugal. [
]A stronger dollar often indicates investors are funnelling 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.
The chief executive of oil major Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L> told Reuters Insider on Friday that oil would not go back to its 2008 peak level of more than $140 a barrel and was instead expected to trade in a $60 to $80 range. [
]This view found resonance in Tehran, where Iran's OPEC governor was quoted on Friday as saying that oil prices would not drop below $60 per barrel by July this year. [
] (Editing by Sue Thomas)