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...
Rystad Energy – The COVID-19 pandemic has stymied oil and gas activity, a phenomenon that has now affected the drilling market both...
Mike Wittner – The ICE – The world oil market is in the midst of a massive collapse in demand, driven by...
Bethany Blankley – The Center Square – The push to bring more economic development to the Appalachian region of western Pennsylvania, West...
Nathaniel Bullard – Bloomberg – Gas is the future. On Sunday, Virginia-based utility Dominion Energy Inc announced plans to sell almost all of...
U.S. stocks finished higher on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average extending their winning streaks to six sessions, after Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the Trump administration has negotiated its first trade deal with an unnamed country.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 300.03 points, or nearly 0.8%, to finish at 40,527.62. The blue-chip index scored its longest winning streak since July 17, 2024, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
The S&P 500 was up 32.09 points, or 0.6%, to end at 5,560.83. The large-cap index has finished higher for six consecutive trading sessions, logging its largest six-day percentage gain since March 2022.
The Nasdaq Composite gained 95.18 points, or nearly 0.6%, ending at 17,461.32.
Oil prices fell about 2% to a two-week low on Tuesday on expectations OPEC+ will boost output even as U.S. President Donald Trump's on-again off-again trade tariffs could reduce global economic growth and demand for the fuel.
Brent crude futures fell by $1.61 to $64.25 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped by $1.63 to $60.42.
Trump's push to reshape world trade by imposing tariffs on imports into the U.S. has made it probable that the global economy will slip into recession this year, according to a majority of economists in a Reuters poll.
On June 3, Viper Energy (NASDAQ: VNOM), a subsidiary of Diamondback Energy, announced it...
Behind the rolling plains and rocky outcrops of southwestern Oklahoma, a quiet transformation is...
Story By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com | Saudi Arabia is getting ready to engage...
Story By Alex DeMarban |ADN.com| The oil explorer whose last major discovery in Alaska opened...
A key hearing is set for this Friday in Big Spring, Texas, in a...
A quiet energy revolution is unfolding in Appalachia, where natural gas from the Marcellus...
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...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com| The 411,000 barrels daily that OPEC+ said it would...
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...
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