Small oil firms feel the pinch of industry consolidation
In the heart of West Texas, small oil businesses like Benro Pump and...
In the heart of West Texas, small oil businesses like Benro Pump and Supply battle to stay relevant as industry consolidation and technological advancements push them to the margins. Thomas Jacob of Rystad Energy notes that mergers create big companies that often favor equally large vendors, leaving smaller firms struggling to compete on price and scale.
Midwest gasoline prices spike on refinery disruptions
US Midwest gasoline prices hovered above the national average over the...
US Midwest gasoline prices hovered above the national average over the past three weeks as a series of refinery outages in Chicago and Ohio reduced refinery utilization and drained regional inventories, the Energy Information Administration reports. Regional capacity utilization has recovered to 97% since Aug. 16 after dropping to 86% in the previous two weeks.
American Petroleum Institute executives present at the Democratic National Convention struck a note of...
American Petroleum Institute executives present at the Democratic National Convention struck a note of guarded optimism regarding a potential Kamala Harris presidency, pointing to her softened stance on fracking as a promising development. "We all know they are going to continue the old songs of price collusion and polluting for profits and all those things, but we're reducing emissions more than anywhere else in the world …we are going to continue to send that message while we're here," said API President and CEO Mike Sommers.
More than 100 top economic leaders from around the world are huffing...
More than 100 top economic leaders from around the world are huffing mountain air together at the Kansas City Federal Reserve’s annual Jackson Hole symposium, where Fed Chair Jerome Powell is expected to drop hints today about how hard and fast the US central bank will ease record-high interest rates.
Now that inflation and the labor market have cooled off…economists are about as sure as they can be that the Fed will issue the first of many rate cuts at its next meeting in September. They became more confident this week after new data showed that the US has recently added nearly 30% fewer jobs than previously thought.
The question now is whether a quarter-point reduction to the current 23-year-high interest rate of 5.25%–5.5% is enough. You can count on Powell to provide zero concrete answers and instead give economists just enough to maybe infer his next move.
Home sales rose for the first time in five months. Closed...
Home sales rose for the first time in five months. Closed sales of previously owned homes ticked up 1.3% in July, with many of the gains coming in the Northeast, CNBC reported. Analysts were quick to point out that sales were still sluggish (down 2.5% compared with the same period last year), but a win’s a win. The boost in home sales was helped by better mortgage rates, which are finally easing toward less outlandish levels: The average rate on a 30-year mortgage fell to 6.6% this week, its lowest rate in 15 months and down from a high of 7.8% last year. Experts predict an even sharper drop could be coming soon.
Walmart+ subscribers will get a 25% discount on Burger King orders and free Whoppers every three months, the retailer announced, in an effort to compete with Amazon Prime perks.
The FDA approved new Covid vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna that target an offshoot of the Omicron variant.
Jack Daniel’s maker Brown-Forman said it will stop pushing for more suppliers with minority backgrounds and end participation in LGBTQ-friendly rankings, becoming the latest company to scrap DEI initiatives.
Instagram is adding an option for users to put a song on their profiles, in case you missed being able to set your Myspace page to “Crazy” by Gnarls Barkley in 2006.
Sonos users are big mad after the CEO said the audio company’s old app, which many prefer to the buggy new version, can’t be rereleased.