Crude-oil prices fell Tuesday in London from near multiweek highs hit in the previous session, as investors were unsettled by signs of a cool-down in China’s red-hot property market and warming temperatures in the U.S. New-home price acceleration in China’s biggest cities showed its first slowdown in a year. This follows indications from banks and developers that lenders are treating the sector with increasing caution amid worries about possible bad loans.  China is a driver for oil-demand growth, and any indication of slowing economic activity there is greeted with caution by investors. Brent crude for April delivery fell 43 cents to $110.21 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe. U.S. crude-oil futures were down 75 cents at $102.70 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Production disruptions in Libya and South Sudan continue to underpin the Brent contract, enabling it to remain just below 2014 highs. Analysts at PVM, […]