Nvidia headlines the final big earnings week. The days...
Nvidia headlines the final big earnings week. The days of 300% growth may be behind Nvidia, but the $3.2 trillion tech giant will try to convince investors the AI boom has room to run when it reports earnings on Wednesday. Other companies dishing on their Q1s include Salesforce—maybe we’ll learn what it does—and retailers Costco, Best Buy, and Dick’s Sporting Goods. Rounding out the economic calendar is the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the PCE Price Index, which will be released on Friday.
More than 45 people were injured when a minivan plowed into the crowd at Liverpool FC’s victory parade yesterday. Police say the 53-year-old British driver who was arrested at the scene was acting alone and that the incident was not being investigated as terrorism.
A cryptocurrency investor was arrested and charged with kidnapping and torturing a man in his NYC apartment for weeks, allegedly to force him to divulge his bitcoin password.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell defended the central bank’s COVID-19 response, government employees, and American universities in a speech at Princeton University.
Phil Robertson, the patriarch of the “Duck Dynasty” family, died at 79.
British-South African athlete Lewis Pugh became the first person to swim around Martha’s Vineyard. His goal was to raise awareness for shark protection ahead of the 50th anniversary of Jaws.
US drillers cut oil, gas rigs to lowest since November 2021
The combined oil and gas rig count, an early indicator...
The combined oil and gas rig count, an early indicator of future output, fell by 10 to 566 in the week to May 23. That 10-rig reduction was the biggest weekly decline in total rigs since September 2023. It was also the first time since September 2024 that drillers reduced the number of rigs operating for four weeks in a row..
Oil rigs fell by eight to 465 this week, their lowest since November 2021. Gas rigs fell by two to 98, their lowest since last month.
In the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, drillers cut four rigs, bringing the total down to 42, the lowest since December 2021.
In the Permian Basin in West Texas and eastern New Mexico, the nation's biggest oil-producing shale formation, drillers cut three rigs, bringing the total down to 279, the lowest since November 2021.
New Mexico, drillers cut two rigs, down to 92, North Dakota, drillers cut two rigs, down to 30, in Texas, drillers cut five rigs, down to 266, and Oklahoma lost 2 rigs, down to 53 rigs.
(Reuters) - Oil prices gained on Friday as U.S. buyers covered positions...
(Reuters) - Oil prices gained on Friday as U.S. buyers covered positions ahead of the three-day Memorial Day weekend amid worries over the latest round of nuclear talks between American and Iranian negotiators.
Brent crude futures settled at $64.78 a barrel, up 34 cents, or 0.54%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures finished at $61.53, up 33 cents, or 0.54%.
"I think there is some short-covering going into this weekend," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst with Price Futures Group. The Memorial Day weekend kicks off the U.S. summer driving season, the period of highest demand for motor fuels.
U.S. and Iranian negotiators met in Rome on Friday for another round of talks aimed at curtailing the Islamic Republic's nuclear program. Flynn said traders are afraid crude supplies could be interrupted if talks fail to reach a deal.
"The talks are not looking good," he said. "If these are the last talks and there's no deal, it could give a green light to the Israelis to attack. Iran."
Dow slides 200 points, S&P 500 tumbles for a fourth day after Trump threatens tariffs on EU, Apple
Stocks opened sharply lower Friday, with investors spooked by President...
Stocks opened sharply lower Friday, with investors spooked by President Donald Trump's latest tariff threats. The main indexes came off their lows throughout the session, but still headed into the long holiday weekend with stiff weekly losses.
Executives have warned that growth in Permian Basin natural gas production is rapidly creating an urgent need for expanded pipeline capacity to transport the increased supply. The increase in gas output has been driven by rising gas-to-oil ratios and strong demand for US liquified natural gas exports.