DOE plans data centers on federal land for AI support
Energy Secretary Chris Wright has detailed a Department of Energy plan...
Energy Secretary Chris Wright has detailed a Department of Energy plan to build data centers on federal land, co-locating them with power sources to support artificial intelligence. The department has identified 16 potential sites, including national labs, and plans to have AI infrastructure ready by the end of 2025 and data centers operational by 2027.
Tariffs, price slump pressure top US oilfield servicers
New tariffs and falling crude prices are squeezing US oilfield service...
New tariffs and falling crude prices are squeezing US oilfield service firms, with analysts forecasting revenue declines and outsized profit hits for SLB, Halliburton and Baker Hughes. Tariff-driven cost hikes on equipment like pipes, sucker rods and valve fittings are expected to take the heaviest toll on firms with global supply chains.
Oil prices slide 2% to near 4-year low as US trade conflict fuels recession fears
(Reuters) -Oil prices slid 2% to a near four-year low...
(Reuters) -Oil prices slid 2% to a near four-year low on Monday on worries U.S. President Donald Trump's latest trade tariffs could push economies worldwide into recession and reduce global energy demand.
Brent futures fell $1.37, or 2.1%, to settle at $64.21 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell $1.29, or 2.1%, to settle at $60.70.
That pushed both crude benchmarks, which fell about 11% last week, to their lowest closes since April 2021.
The session was marked by extreme volatility with intraday prices down more than $3 a barrel overnight and up over $1 Monday morning after a news report said Trump was considering a 90-day pause on tariffs. White House officials quickly denied the report, sending crude prices back into the red.
Dow slides more than 300 points as Trump tariffs rattle stocks for a third day
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell for a third day following President...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell for a third day following President Donald Trump’s tariff rollout, with the president threatening even higher rates against China on Monday.
The session was a wild one as traders tried to speculate when the market would bottom from Trump’s tariff turmoil, with the Dow posting its largest intraday point swing ever recorded.
Trading volume also reached its highest level in at least 18 years, with markets trading about 29 billion shares. That surpassed Friday’s volume of 26.77 billion shares, as well as the 10-day average volume of 16.94 billion shares.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 349.26 points, or 0.91%, to close at 37,965.60. The 30-stock average had fallen more than 1,700 points during its Monday session low. It then swung 2,595 points from low to high, in a record reversal.
The S&P 500 shed 0.23% to end at 5,062.25. The broad market average was down 4.7% at the lows of the session. It briefly entered bear market territory during the session, but was last off nearly 18% from its recent high.
The Nasdaq Composite inched higher by 0.10% to settle at 15,603.26. Investors stepped in to buy some megacap tech stocks such as Nvidia and Palantir. At its low in the session, the tech-heavy index was off more than 5%.
Oil prices have plunged to their lowest levels in almost four years due to 1) tariffs threatening to lower global demand for fuel and 2) OPEC+ deciding to boost output. Middle East benchmark indexes fell the most since 2020 on Sunday.