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...
TIME – The U.S. Supreme Court handed another setback to the Keystone XL oil sands pipeline from Canada on Monday by keeping...
Benchmark U.S. crude oil for January delivery rose 97 cents to $73.44 per barrel Tuesday. Brent crude for February delivery rose $1.28 to $79.23 per barrel.
Wholesale gasoline for January delivery rose 4 cents to $2.20 a gallon. January heating oil rose 5 cents to $2.72 a gallon. January natural gas fell 1 cent to $2.49 per 1,000 cubic feet.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average® (DJI) notched a record-high close for the fifth straight day Tuesday, and the S&P 500® index (SPX) edged even closer to an all-time high as the market's holiday rally continued to keep its legs, fueled by the Federal Reserve's apparent policy "pivot" and optimism the economy can pull off a "soft landing."
Tuesday produced another day of broad gains, with most major market sectors extending a rally sparked by last week's Fed policy meeting, at which the central bank scaled up its projection for rate cuts in 2024. Small-cap stocks continued to close a gap with larger counterparts as the Russell 2000® Index (RUT) jumped nearly 2% to a 16-month high.
The S&P 500 ended within 28.19 points, or 0.6% of its record-closing high of 4,796.56, posted on January 3, 2022, the first trading day of that year. Here's where the major benchmarks ended:
The S&P 500 index was up 27.81 points (0.6%) at 4,768.37; the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 251.90 points (0.7%) at 37,557.92; the Nasdaq Composite® (COMP) was up 98.03 points (0.7%) at 15,003.22.
US Steel is turning Japanese in a $14.1 billion deal. US Steel, once the world’s largest company and a symbol of US manufacturing might that counts J.P. Morgan and Andrew Carnegie among its founders, has agreed to be bought by Japan’s Nippon Steel. The deal ends months of speculation over the 122-year-old steel company’s fate after it rebuffed a $7.3 billion offer from domestic rival Cleveland-Cliffs over the summer. Assuming regulators and US Steel’s shareholders sign off on the purchase, it would make Nippon the second-biggest steel company globally and give it a major presence in the US market, which uses a lot of steel, especially to make cars.
Nikola's founder gets four years for fraud. Trevor Milton was sentenced to four years in prison yesterday after having been found guilty of defrauding investors in the electric vehicle company he founded. While that’s less than the Elizabeth Holmes-level, 11-year sentence prosecutors had pushed for, it’s more than the probation he requested. Nikola was briefly the third-most-valuable vehicle company in the US, but its value plunged when a short seller accused the company of lying about its tech. Prosecutors agreed and claimed Milton fibbed about the company’s progress, including in an infamous video that purported to show one of its trucks operational and moving when it was really just rolled down a hill.
A volcano erupted on Iceland’s Reykjanes Peninsula yesterday near a town that was evacuated last month after a series of earthquakes signaled an eruption was coming. The government said the volcanic activity was the most powerful the area had seen since a major disaster in the 1970s.
The Energy Information Administration expects US oil production from major US shale formations to decline for the third month in a row to 9.692 million barrels per day in January, even as Permian Basin output is projected to hit a record 5.986 million bpd.
Additionally, shale gas production is set to fall to 99 Bcf/d in January, which would mark the fifth straight month of declines
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...
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 Andreas Exarheas| RIGZONE.COM | Chevron will “consolidate or eliminate some positions” as part of...
Presidio Petroleum is preparing to enter the public markets through a strategic merger with...
By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com | The United States electric vehicle industry is facing...
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...
by Bloomberg, via RigZone.com|Weilun Soon, Rakesh Sharma, Reporting| At least four tankers discharged millions...
Fossil fuel financing by Wall Street’s leading banks has declined sharply in 2025, highlighting...
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