The Street – Denbury Resources (DNR) – shares rose Wednesday, after the oil and natural gas producer unveiled a prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy...
By: Wood Mackenzie – Forbes – As Biden nudges ahead in the polls, the US oil and gas industry should prepare for...
By: Sergio Chapa – Houston Chronicle – Drilling rig towers may soon break the horizon of Lake Somerville, a popular reservoir 90...
CNBC – Oil and gas majors are likely to report “horrendous” second-quarter results over the next two weeks, energy analysts have told...
By: Bryan Gruley, Kevin Crowley, Rachel Adams-Heard, and David Wethe – Bloomberg – Twenty years ago, before the U.S. oil industry became...
Houston Chronicle – Banks are selling off loans and cutting credit lines to oil and gas companies to reduce their risk of...
By: Clifford Krauss – The New York Times – In the first big deal since oil prices crashed four months ago, Chevron...
Reuters – A U.S. Supreme Court decision recognizing about half of Oklahoma as Native American reservation land has implications for oil and...
NRDC – Montana’s Senator Jon Tester (D) announced today his intent to introduce the Leasing Market Efficiency Act, that would close an oil and...
Janet Wilson and Mark Olalde – Desert Sun – California Resources Corp., the state’s largest oil and gas production company with more...
Matador (MTDR) is set to contribute its Pronto Midstream subsidiary to San Mateo Midstream, a joint venture with Five Point Energy, in a strategic move valued at approximately $600 million. The transaction involves Pronto's 45-mile natural gas gathering network in New Mexico and San Mateo's 140-mile natural gas gathering and processing assets in Texas. TD Cowen notes that the market currently undervalues these midstream assets.
Upon closing, Matador will receive around $220 million in cash from Five Point, which the company plans to use for debt reduction. The deal includes agreements for sour gas treatment in Lea County, with Pronto set to deliver sour gas to Northwind Midstream, a Five Point affiliate. TD Cowen highlighted the transaction's attractiveness, estimating a 2.4x return on invested capital and a 9x EBITDA multiple. The deal is expected to be completed before the end of the year.
HOUSTON, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on Thursday as investors weighed an ample supply outlook for next year against OPEC+ delaying its planned output increase by three months to April 2025.
Brent crude settled down 22 cents, or 0.3%, at $72.09 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) settled down 24 cents, or 0.35%, at $68.30 a barrel.
OPEC+, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries plus allies including Russia, had been planning to start unwinding cuts from October 2024, but slowing global demand and booming production outside of the group forced it to postpone the plans on several occasions.
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...
Story By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com | Saudi Arabia is getting ready to engage...
Mexico’s private oil producer Hokchi Energy is locked in a high-stakes standoff with Pemex...
By David O. Williams |RealVail.com| President Donald Trump is poised to issue an executive order...
The World Bank has made a landmark decision by lifting its long-standing ban on...
In the last 24 hours, tensions in the Middle East have entered a new...
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...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | U.S. oil producers flocked to hedge higher prices...
Tucked into a sweeping fiscal package backed by President Donald Trump, Senate Republicans are...
Have your oil & gas questions answered by industry experts.