(Reuters) Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman told shareholders during the bank’s annual general meeting on May 26 that he does not plan...
By: CNBC – Natural gas surged above $9 per million British thermal units, or MMBtu, on Wednesday, hitting the highest level in more...
By: David French – Reuters – Energy bankers and hedge fund managers who lost one client after another when poor returns pushed...
(Bloomberg) — Global power grids are about to face their biggest test in decades with electricity generation strangled in the world’s largest...
(Bloomberg) — The liquefied natural gas market is hurtling toward a potentially historic shortage this winter as the world rushes to secure...
FORT WORTH, Texas—In the Permian Basin, the popularity of longer laterals is slowly but steadily rising, according to Rystad Energy’s upstream research...
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By: Hart Energy – Permian operator Colgate Energy agreed on May 19 to combine with Centennial Resource Development Inc., squashing recent rumors that...
Story by Justin Jacobs, Financial Times. Prices for fuel at the pump have gotten even more painful of late—and things could get...
Story from Hart Energy: Exxon Mobil said on May 19 that it signed an agreement with subsidiaries of Denver-based BKV Corp. for the sale...
(Wednesday market close) Major U.S. equity benchmarks ended lower late Wednesday, retreating sharply to erase initial gains as investors appeared keen to lock in some profits from the market's recent rally ahead of the three-day holiday weekend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average® (DJI) touched another record high early in the session but ended with its first loss in 10 days.
The late sell-off didn't appear to be triggered by any piece of news, though disappointing quarterly results from FedEx (FDX) late Tuesday sent the shipping giant's shares tumbling 12%, weighing on the transportation industry and raising some potential red flags over the economy.
The energy sector is starting higher, supported by strength in the underlying commodities. Meanwhile, the major market futures are lower as the year-end rally takes a breather.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are higher in early trading, on pace for their third-straight session of gains as the focus shifts back to supply woes amid ongoing tensions in the Red Sea and the Middle East. Earlier today, Greece advised commercial ships sailing the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to avoid Yemeni waters. Greek ship owners control approximately 20% of the world’s commercial vessels in carrying capacity. Investors will also look to the EIA data later today after last night’s API report showed a surprise build of 939K barrels last week. Analysts are expecting the government data to show a 2.2mm barrel draw.
Natural gas futures are higher, tracking gains in the crude complex but gains are capped ahead of the EIA weekly storage report.
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