By: Sabrina Valle in Houston, Liz Hampton in Denver, and Shariq Khan – Reuters – Exxon Mobil Corp has begun marketing U.S....
By: Reuters – Chesapeake Energy Corp on Tuesday raised its full-year forecasts for adjusted core income and production after beating Wall Street...
By: Stephen Cunningham – Argus Media – Oil Majors ExxonMobil and Chevron are ramping up drilling operations in the Permian basin of...
By: Anna Shiryaevskaya, Stephen Stapczynski, and Ann Koh – Bloomberg News – The era of cheap natural gas is over, giving way...
By Bob Campbell, Odessa American, Texas – If the energy industry would quit firing all its employees at the first sign of...
By: Adrian Hedden – Carlsbad Current Argus – As gas production ramps up again New Mexico’s Democrat leaders in Congress urged the...
By: Brian Maffly – Salt Lake Tribune – There were just three rigs drilling in Utah’s oil and gas fields last January...
By: J. Robinson & Kelsey Hallahan – S&P Global Platts – As Appalachia’s natural gas markets turn increasingly bullish, one of the...
By: Barry Po – Forbes – The winds of change are howling in the world of heavy industry. If there were any...
By: Alex Mills – Abilene Reporter News – Natural gas prices broke through the $4 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf) level this...
The U.S. stock market ended sharply lower Friday, in a broad selloff that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average fall almost 700 points.
The Dow Jones closed 1.6% lower, while the S&P 500 slumped 1.5% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.6%, according to preliminary data from FactSet. All three indexes ended Friday with back-to-back weekly declines as investors weighed a jobs report that was hotter than Wall Street anticipated.
In the bond market, Treasury yields rose Friday after a stronger-than-expected employment report. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note climbed Friday to 4.772%, the highest level since Nov. 1, 2023 based on 3 p.m. Eastern time levels, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
For the week, the Dow fell 1.9%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.9% and the Nasdaq shed 2.3%, the preliminary data from FactSet showed.
The U.S. added a bigger-than-expected 256,000 new jobs in December, but most of the increase was concentrated in just a few industries and there was little sign of reheating in a gradually cooling labor market. U.S. unemployment rate drops to 4.1% in December from 4.2%
Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast an increase of 155,000 new jobs in December.
A long-overlooked shale play in South Texas might finally be showing signs of promise,...
In a stark reminder of the volatile energy landscape and the relentless drive for...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | Oil prices have been on the mend this...
Over the past two decades, the U.S. shale revolution has dramatically transformed the global...
(UPI) — The Department of Interior on Thursday released an analysis of fossil fuel...
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by Andreas Exarheas | RigZone.com | In an EBW Analytics Group report sent to Rigzone...
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On April 8, 2025, the Keystone Pipeline experienced a significant rupture near Fort Ransom,...
By Georgina McCartney | (Reuters) -The U.S. upstream oil and gas M&A market is...
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