By: Beck Connely – Enid News & Eagle – Oklahoma is set to receive a federal grant to begin addressing an orphaned...
STORY BY Mark Jaffe, THE COLORADO SUN. Vic Behrens drives the dusty, dirt roads of Adams and Arapahoe counties in Colorado looking...
By: Reuters – Rocketing LNG cargo prices have squeezed out dozens of smaller traders, concentrating the business in the hands of a...
By: Reuters – Hedge Fund managers anticipate an imminent recession that will hit consumption of middle distillates such as diesel especially hard,...
Story by Rachel Millard, The Telegraph. Bernard Looney, the boss of BP, was summoned by Whitehall within a day of Russia invading Ukraine....
LONDON (Reuters) – Hedge funds around the world fled positions in energy stocks, bonds and futures last week just in time to...
Story by Jennifer Pallanich. Talos Energy Inc. plans to buy EnVen Energy Corp. in a $1.1 billion deal that increases Talos’ Gulf of Mexico...
MarketWatch. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon resoundingly assured lawmakers that his bank has no intention of stopping the financing of growth in...
By Joseph Adinolfi | MarketWatch. American consumers may have gotten a bit of a break from sky-high gas prices over the past...
By: The New York Times – The German government on Wednesday announced that it was taking over Uniper, previously the country’s largest...
(Bloomberg) OPEC+ is expected to revive some curtailed crude production in April following US President Donald Trump’s appeals to the group to lower prices, said Jason Prior, Bank of America Corp.’s head of oil trading.
“We expect some production to be brought back to market,” Prior said in an interview Monday. The group, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, may restore around 150,000 barrels a day of production starting in April, he said.
Trump has been pushing OPEC+ — which halted some output in 2022 — to lower oil prices in a bid to pressure Russia to end the war in Ukraine. Prices of West Texas Intermediate, which peaked in mid-January to $80 a barrel, have since retreated and are now close to $70.
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U.S. stocks ended mostly lower Monday, with the S&P 500 failing to land in positive territory after wavering between gains and losses during the trading session.
The S&P 500 fell 29.88 points, or 0.5%, to close at 5,983.25.
The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 237.08 points, or 1.2%, to finish at 19,286.92.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 33.19 points, or 0.1%, to end at 43,461.21.
The S&P 500 was dragged down by a sharp loss in its biggest sector, information technology, which slumped 1.4% as shares of Big Tech companies including Nvidia Corp. and Microsoft Corp. dropped.
Investors' worries over tariffs also appeared to weigh on the market, after President Donald Trump indicated on Monday that tariffs on Canada and Mexico will take effect next week after their 30-day pause concludes.
The U.S. stock market struggled to recover from Friday's selloff, which had left all three major benchmarks down for the week.
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