By: Bozorgmehr Sharafedin – Reuters – Oil prices extended gains on Thursday, riding higher on growing fuel demand and a bigger-than-expected draw...
By: Jeff Barron – EIA – Crude oil inventories in Cushing, Oklahoma, totaled 32.9 million barrels (excluding pipeline fill and stocks in...
By: Dave Kolpack – AP – The latest bout of legal wrangling over the collection of North Dakota oil and gas royalties...
By: Ron Busso – Reuters – Deep in the Oman desert lies one of BP’s more lucrative projects, a mass of steel...
(Reuters) – Top U.S. shale oil producer Pioneer Natural Resources Co has put its assets in the Delaware Basin of Texas on...
By: Arathy Nair – Reuters – U.S. energy producers have cut so deeply into a once-large reserve of oil wells waiting to...
By: Drew Costley – AP – Los Angeles County supervisors voted unanimously Wednesday to phase out oil and gas drilling and ban...
By: Rachel Treisman – NPR – Harvard University says it will end its investments in fossil fuels, a move that activists —...
By: David French – Reuters – GeoSouthern, a U.S. natural gas exploration and production company backed by Blackstone Inc’s credit investment arm,...
By: Adrian Hedden – Carlsbad Current Argus – Debate over federal action to prevent the extinction of a small, desert bird in...
The American Petroleum Institute (API) estimated that crude oil inventories in the United States fell by 4.022 million barrels for the week ending January 3. Analysts had expected a 250,000 barrel draw. For the week prior, the API reported a draw of 1.442-million-barrel in U.S. crude oil inventories in the midst of build season.
U.S. stocks finished lower on Tuesday as Treasury yields spiked after a pair of strong economic reports dampened hopes for aggressive Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts this year.
The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 375.30 points, or 1.9%, to end at 19,489.68. The tech-heavy index suffered its worst day since Dec. 18, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
The S&P 500 was off 66.35 points, or 1.1%, to finish at 5,909.03.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 178.20 points, or 0.4%, ending at 42,528.36. It was the worst day for the blue-chip index since Dec. 30, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
A sharp selloff in the government-debt market weighed on U.S. technology stocks on Tuesday after the December ISM services and November job-openings reports beat consensus, leading markets to dial back their expectations for rate cuts this year.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note jumped nearly 7 basis points to 4.684% on Tuesday afternoon, the highest since April 25 of last year. The 30-year rate spiked over 7 basis points to 4.91%, the highest since November 2023, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
"I think there's a level at which rates rise enough that investors begin to worry that it hurts the entirety of the equity market because it hurts the economy more," said Brent Schutte, chief investment officer at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company.
A key hearing is set for this Friday in Big Spring, Texas, in a...
Behind the rolling plains and rocky outcrops of southwestern Oklahoma, a quiet transformation is...
Story By Alex DeMarban |ADN.com| The oil explorer whose last major discovery in Alaska opened...
by Andreas Exarheas | RigZone.com |In a release sent to Rigzone this week, Enverus announced...
In the last 24 hours, tensions in the Middle East have entered a new...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | U.S. oil producers flocked to hedge higher prices...
Tensions between Israel and Iran have sparked a surge in oil prices this June,...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | A total of 93 oil and gas firms...
Tucked into a sweeping fiscal package backed by President Donald Trump, Senate Republicans are...
A-list actors are turning their attention to Wall Street, and this time, the plot...
Amid rising global tensions following U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, former President Donald...
The oil and gas sector is undergoing a major digital overhaul, and data is...
Have your oil & gas questions answered by industry experts.