The Oklahoman – Oklahoma is a state that has learned how to live through boom and bust. While we are constantly working...
Reuters – Royalty checks from shale oil pumped on Paul Ruckman’s land allowed the South Texas retiree to build a six-bedroom, seven-bathroom...
Reuters – Continental Resources, one of the largest U.S. shale oil producers, on Wednesday urged North Dakota energy regulators to intervene in the...
Midland Reporter-Telegram – U.S. operators have been slashing production in response to the collapse in both oil demand and oil prices. Those...
Forbes – As with seemingly every other aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic, the fallout and recovery related to the U.S. oil and...
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By: Scott Carpenter – Forbes – Bill Gilmer knows an economic bust when he sees one. In the 1980s, when oil prices...
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By Leah McGrath Goodman, the Institutional Investor. The first-ever zero oil futures trade happened at 2:08 p.m. ET on Monday, April 20, during...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 234.21 points, or 0.6%, ending at 38,763.45.
The S&P 500 shed 40.53 points, or 0.8%, closing at 5,199.50.
The Nasdaq Composite dropped 171.05 points, or 1.1%, finishing at 16,195.81.
It has been the worst five-day start to a month for both the Dow and the S&P 500 since January 2016, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
The selloff in U.S. equities resumed despite a sharp rebound for Japanese stocks, with the Nikkei 225 up 1.2% on Wednesday.
According to Informa Global Markets, U.S. capital markets were also opening back up, with Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc. leading a pack of investment-grade companies that borrowed $31.8 billion on Wednesday alone.
Underground stocks finished the last full week of July at 3,249 Bcf, or 16% above the five-year average, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). There are 14 more weekly government storage reports left for this injection season, including Thursday’s EIA report, for which NGI has modeled a 30 Bcf build.
“On the bull side, you can see that injections have been lean,” veteran gas analyst Thomas Saal said. Market jitters usually appear when inventory scenarios approach the 4,000 Bcf level. “At the rate we're going now, if we put 20 Bcf to 30 Bcf in weekly for the rest of the season, we're not going to have to worry about it.”
The EIA Natural Gas Storage Dashboard has additional updates on storage market conditions.
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