SEATTLE, Oct. 12, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — JND Class Action Administration – Citation Oil and Gas Corp. The Settlement Class includes: All non-excluded owners of a...
U.S. natural gas supply report. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Natural Gas Monthly, September 2018 In the first half of 2018, U.S. natural gas...
Stay updated on oil and gas stories, prices and the weekly rig count. Sign up for our Weekly Newsletter HERE. Baker Hughes...
OKLAHOMA CITY (TNS) — Six Oklahomans made the prestigious Forbes 400 list of wealthiest Americans, while one recently cracked the list of...
DENVER, Oct. 2, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — LongPoint Minerals II, LLC (LongPoint II) announced the closing of its capital raise totaling over $846 million with an anchor equity...
Cenovus Energy Inc. Chief Executive Officer Alex Pourbaix was in his office in downtown Calgary, Canada in late August when he checked his...
In the previous article hopefully, I prompted an appreciation for sand, particularly the silica sand used for hydraulic fracturing of most wells...
For a number of reasons, the US inventory of drilled-but-uncompleted wells (DUCs) has swelled from almost 4,300 to more than 8,200 in...
Tall City Exploration III LLC an oil and gas exploration and production company announced today that it has received a line of...
(Bloomberg) — Matador Resources Co. was the anonymous purchaser of drilling rights in the Permian shale that fetched a record $95,001 per...
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
(Monday market close) Bullish investors picked up where they left off last week, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average® (DJI) to a fourth consecutive record high close as the market extended a holiday-season rally behind ongoing optimism that 2024 will bring lower interest rates and a potential "soft landing" for the economy.
The S&P 500® index (SPX), coming off a seven-week winning streak (its longest string since 2017), ended near a two-year high, as did the Nasdaq Composite® (COMP). Markets remained generally buoyant following last week's relatively tame inflation readings and a more aggressive outlook for rate cuts from the Fed. Here's where the major benchmarks ended:
The S&P 500 index was up 21.37 points (0.5%) at 4,740.56; the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.86 points at 37,306.02; the Nasdaq Composite was up 90.89 points (0.6%) at 14,904.81.
The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) was up about 2 basis points at 3.946%.
The Cboe® Volatility Index (VIX) was up 0.25 at 12.53.
Benchmark U.S. crude oil for January delivery rose $1.04 to $72.47 per barrel Monday. Brent crude for February delivery rose $1.40 to $77.95 per barrel.
Wholesale gasoline for January delivery rose 2 cents to $2.16 a gallon. January heating oil rose 5 cents to $2.67 a gallon. January natural gas rose 1 cent to $2.50 per 1,000 cubic feet.
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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