* Volatile Mideast mix points to upside risks - analysts
* TECHNICALS: Brent is temporarily neutral [
]* Coming Up: U.S. GDP final Q4 estimate at 1230 GMT (Corrects Reuters Instrument Code for Brent paragraph 4)
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) - Oil rose on Friday with Brent crude near $116, and analysts saw the risk of another price spike as unrest bubbled across the Middle East and western powers continued a military campaign in Libya.
Friday protests were planned in Yemen and Bahrain, and investors kept a close eye on Syria, where at least 37 have died following protests against the government of President Bashar al-Assad. [
]Western warplanes struck Libyan ground forces on Friday, pursuing a campaign that has yet to deliver a crippling blow to Muammar Gaddafi's tanks and artillery. [
]Brent crude for May <LCOc1> rose 5 cents to $115.77 a barrel by 1035 GMT, about $4 from a 2-1/2-year high just below $120 reached a month ago. U.S. crude <CLc1> rose 20 cents to $105.80.
Libyan oil exports of about 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) have virtually vanished, eroding global spare capacity as Saudi Arabia and other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries have increased production.
This has heightened talk of the risk of higher prices as unrest continues across the Middle East and North Africa, which combined produce more than a third of the world's oil.
"My gut feeling is that the oil market is more likely to go up than down," said Tony Machacek, a broker at Bache Commodities in London. "There are so many unknowns that could hit supply."
Machacek said the ICE Brent options market had "a significant call skew", indicating that "generally people think there is more risk of movement to the upside".
Reflecting this view, J.P. Morgan analysts headed by Lawrence Eagles, on Friday raised their forecast for Brent in the second quarter to $118 from $105, saying "dips in volatility, like the one that we saw this week, appear to offer good entry points for hedging strategies. [
]"So long as ongoing problems in the Middle East continue to elevate risks of a further supply disruption, there is a strong likelihood of a price spike in the second quarter as the market demands additional oil to meet summer demand," J.P. Morgan said.
Barclays Capital has also raised its projection for 2011 Brent to $112 from $91. [
] <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^More on Middle East unrest: [
] [ ]Libya Graphics http://link.reuters.com/neg68r
Interactive graphic http://link.reuters.com/puk87r ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
"DAY OF DEPARTURE"
In Yemen, the opposition has stepped up efforts to remove President Ali Abdullah Saleh, dismissing his offer to stand down after an election at the end of the year. [
]Protesters plan a "Day of Departure" rally in a country that sits near shipping lanes that skirt the Arabian peninsula and from where al Qaeda has attempted attacks on Saudi Arabia.
In Bahrain, a small island less than 100 km from the hub of the Saudi Arabian oil industry, opposition activists said they planned to hold a day of demonstrations on Friday in defiance of a ban on all public gatherings. [
]J.P. Morgan said extra OPEC supplies were needed in the run-up to northern hemisphere summer demand, before the producer group's next meeting in June.
"By then, it will be too late to prevent higher prices and could extend what we see as a mid-quarter blip to a much more serious and destabilising price surge that could distort stock-holding behaviour and economic growth," the bank said.
Oil prices will stay above $100 a barrel through 2013, a Reuters poll showed, as analysts sharply revised their forecasts upwards on expectations of a protracted outage in Libya and uncertainty elsewhere. [
]The volatile mix of headlines from the Middle East over the past few weeks has taken its toll on trading volumes as investors await the next turn of events.
Not all analysts are bullish. Edward Meir, a senior commodity analyst at brokers MF Global, suggested on Friday that the oil market could be overdone.
"If we assume that Libya's 1 million barrels a day of exports has been more or less replaced by Saudi production (leaving aside crude qualities for the moment), this means that output from the Middle East is relatively unchanged," he said.
Concerns about Portugal's sovereign debt have also slowed oil price gains this week, after the country's prime minister resigned on Wednesday, falling victim to the European Union's rolling financial crisis and prompting Standard & Poor's to downgrade the credit ratings for the nation. [
]European leaders have agreed to raise their financial rescue fund to 440 billion euros ($623 billion) by June. [
] (Additional reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore; editing by Jane Baird)