(Reuters) – Royal Dutch Shell Plc plans to leave Aera, its California-based oil and gas-producing joint venture with Exxon Mobil Corp, four...
By: Joshua Mann – Houston Business Journal – Private equity investment in the oil and gas business could begin to pick up...
By: Matthew Brown and Felicia Fonseca – Associated Press – On oil well pads carved from the wheat fields around Lake Sakakawea,...
As banks pull back from energy lending, a variety of funds, including some of the world’s biggest, are rushing in to fill...
By: Bill Holland – S&P Global Market Intelligence – Designed with input from the financial and regulatory communities, the largest oil and...
By: Corina Ricker – EIA – In our June 2021 Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), we forecast U.S. natural gas prices to increase during...
By: Stephen Cunningham – Rystad Energy – Private equity is finally seeing some upside from shale investments, after treading water for the...
By: Michael Lynch – Forbes – Production of oil and gas from shale has been a modern marvel, and one that has...
By: Robert Tuttle – Bloomberg – Maine became the first U.S. state to enact a law requiring divestment from fossil fuels, after...
By: Jack Money – The Oklahoman – An oil and gas company claims in a lawsuit filed last week that a representative...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 finished lower for a third straight session on Wednesday, joined by the Nasdaq Composite, as investors fretted about rising Treasury yields and the possible outcome of the Nov. 5 presidential election.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished down by 409.94 points, or almost 1 %, at 42,514.95, based on preliminary data. That's the biggest one-day decline since Sept. 6. The Dow briefly dropped by as much as 631.72 points during Wednesday's trading, and finished at its lowest closing level in about two weeks.
The S&P 500 Index closed down by 53.78 points, or 0.9%, at 5,797.42. That was the index's worst one-day performance since Oct. 7.
The Nasdaq Composite ended down by 296.47 points, or 1.6%, at 18,276.65. Wednesday's closing level was the lowest since Oct. 8.
The American Petroleum Institute reported late Tuesday that crude inventories rose by 1.6 million barrels last week. Gasoline stocks dropped 2 million barrels, and distillates, which include heating oil and diesel fuel, declined 1.5 million barrels.
Analysts surveyed by S&P Global Commodity Insights, on average, expect the EIA to report crude stocks falling by 800,000 barrels in the week ended Oct. 18, with gasoline inventories down 2.1 million barrels and distillates down 2.4 million barrels.
Bill Armstrong isn’t following the industry playbook. As U.S. shale producers consolidate and shrink...
Haynesville Gas Takeaway Grows With Leg Pipeline Launch (P&GJ) — Williams Companies has placed its...
Yuka Obayashi and Katya Golubkova | TOKYO (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on...
Merger and acquisition activity in the U.S. upstream oil and gas sector slowed significantly...
by Andreas Exarheas| RIGZONE.COM | Chevron will “consolidate or eliminate some positions” as part of...
The U.S. oil and gas industry is riding a line between productivity and paralysis....
The newly unveiled U.S.–EU energy framework, announced during the July 27–28 summit in Brussels,...
By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com | The United States electric vehicle industry is facing...
Presidio Petroleum is preparing to enter the public markets through a strategic merger with...
Trying to catch up in oil and gas production is difficult enough. It becomes...
Author Mark Davidson, Washington|Editor–Everett Wheeler|Energy Intelligence Group| The number of active US gas rigs...
(Reuters) – U.S. gasoline demand in May fell to the lowest for that month...
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