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				Brent crude futures inched up 36 cents, or 0.37% to $97.14 a 
				barrel by 0925 GMT, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude 
				futures were up 43 cents, a 0.47% gain, at $91.09.  
				 
				Both benchmarks fell to on Wednesday to their weakest levels 
				since before Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of UKraine, that Moscow 
				calls "a special operation". 
				 
				The move followed an unexpected surge in U.S. crude inventories 
				last week. Gasoline stocks, the proxy for demand, also showed a 
				surprise build as demand slowed, the Energy Information 
				Administration said. 
				 
				The decision on Wednesday by the Organization of the Petroleum 
				Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, known as OPEC+, 
				to raise its oil output target by 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) 
				in September has added to bearish sentiment. 
				 
				"The largely symbolic increase will obviously not provide a 
				significant buffer to any potential supply shock, but the oil 
				balance will not get tighter either," said Tamas Varga of oil 
				broker PVM. 
				 
				While the increase is equivalent to just 0.1% of global demand, 
				the demand outlook remains clouded by rising fears of an 
				economic slump in the United States and Europe, debt distress in 
				emerging market economies, and a strict zero COVID-19 policy in 
				China, the world's largest oil importer. 
				 
				Still, the group's limited spare capacity, which it highlighted 
				in a statement on Wednesday, is providing a floor to oil prices.
				 
				 
				"We believe (limited spare capacity) will effectively result in 
				a production increase of just one-third of the agreed volumes in 
				September," UBS oil analyst Giovanni Staunovo said. 
				 
				Edward Moya, senior analyst with OANDA, said he expected prices 
				to trend higher even against the worsening economic backdrop.
				 
				 
				"Crude prices should find strong support around the $90 level 
				and eventually will rebound towards the $100 barrel level even 
				as the global economic slowdown accelerates," he said. 
				 
				Additional price support came from the Caspian Pipeline 
				Consortium (CPC), which connects Kazakh oil fields with the 
				Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, and which said on 
				Wednesday that supplies were significantly down. 
				 
				(Additional reporting by Laura Sanicola and Emily ChowEditing by 
				Tomasz Janowski) 
				 
  
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