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Oil holds near 3-wk lows as Greek enters 2nd day of bank shutdown

TOKYO - Oil futures hovered below three-week lows on Tuesday after Greeks took to the streets to protest against austerity following a bank shutdown, keeping investors away from riskier assets and putting Brent crude on course for a second month ...

TOKYO - Oil futures hovered below three-week lows on Tuesday after Greeks took to the streets to protest against austerity following a bank shutdown, keeping investors away from riskier assets and putting Brent crude on course for a second month of declines. Brent crude futures were down 16 cents at $61.85 a barrel at 0200 GMT, after falling to $62.01 on Monday, their weakest finish since June 5. The contract is heading for its second straight monthly decline.

U.S. crude dropped 20 cents to $58.13, having closed down $1.30 at $58.33 a barrel, its lowest settlement since June 8. It is set for its first monthly decline in three.

" Greece  is still the word," said Ben Le Brun, market analyst at OptionsXpress in  Sydney . "That story doesn't look like stopping anytime soon."

Tens of thousands of Greeks hit the streets on Monday after waking up to shuttered banks, closed cash machines and a climate of rumors and conspiracy theories following the breakdown in talks between  Athens  and its creditors.

Any resolution to the crisis is unlikely before a referendum on  Greece 's bailout is held on Sunday, after Prime Minister  Alexis Tsipras  announced the vote, wrong-footing European leaders and policy makers.

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Investors are also looking at the  U.S. government 's June payrolls report on Thursday and talks on Iran's disputed nuclear program going on in  Vienna , Le Brun said.

The former may reinforce ideas that the U.S. Federal Reserve might raise interest rates as early as September, the first such hike in about 10 years.

The  Vienna  talks would continue past Tuesday's deadline for a comprehensive agreement intended to open the door to ending sanctions in exchange for limits on Iran's most sensitive nuclear activities for at least a decade, a senior U.S. official said on Tuesday.

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