This past winter, during a period of extreme cold throughout much of our nation, a potential natural gas crisis was averted thanks...
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported Thursday that domestic supplies of natural gas fell by 63 billion cubic feet for the week...
Baker Hughes published its North American rig count report on Thursday, one day earlier than usual, due to the Good Friday holiday...
Update May 14th, 2020 – Chesapeake Energy Corp said it would prepay a total of $25 million in incentive compensation to 21...
The Denver Business Journal reports that Denver based SM Energy Co. has finalized a $500 million deal to sell the majority of...
Shale energy company Bill Barrett Corp. completed its merger with Fifth Creek Energy and started trading last Tuesday under the new symbol,...
Oklahoma City-based Devon Energy Corp said on Monday it was looking to sell even more assets than previously announced in order to...
Second straight weekly rise in the U.S. oil-rig count Crude oil prices have added about 7.7% over the past two weeks, driven...
South Korean energy giant SK Innovation has signed an agreement to acquire a US oil and gas explorer to expand its overseas...
Producers in the recently opened Merge play of Oklahoma’s Anadarko Basin are sitting atop a resource that rivals some of the world’s...
U.S. stocks finished slightly lower on Monday as artificial intelligence stocks extended their recent slide, with investors continuing to rotate away from high-flying tech names ahead of a critical week of delayed economic data.
Market Drivers: Certain AI stocks bogged down the broader market during Monday's session, with shares of Broadcom and Oracle—two names that led a rotation away from AI last week—declining more than 5% and more than 2%, respectively. Others like Microsoft also suffered some losses.
The market wiped out an initial 0.5% gain and moved lower after the opening bell, with megacap tech serving as a source of weakness. Small cap names lagged, with the Russell 2000 trailing the S&P 600.
Sector Performance: Investors moved instead to areas more sensitive to the economy, such as consumer discretionary and industrials. They also loaded up on health-care shares. Energy was the lagging sector as both crude and natural gas continued to slide, while biopharma and managed care names mainly traded higher.
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com| In a statement sent to Rigzone late Wednesday, U.S. Geological Survey...
The history of the global oil and gas industry is inextricably linked to the...
Santa Fe, NM – New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez filed a lawsuit on...
(Reuters) Activist investment firm Kimmeridge Energy Management has submitted a $6 billion offer to...
Japan Petroleum Exploration Co Ltd has spent decades quietly building an international upstream portfolio,...
🎄The holiday season exposes how tight diesel markets really are. ⛽️Diesel demand during Christmas...
The Energy as a Service (EaaS) market is projected to double to over $55...
The oil and gas sector enters 2026 navigating a more turbulent trade and policy...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | The Permian Basin is the largest contributor to U.S....
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