Spicewood Mineral Partners Closes Initial $250 Million Fund Above Target
Spicewood Mineral Partners recently closed on its initial fund, which the Dallas-based...
Spicewood Mineral Partners recently closed on its initial fund, which the Dallas-based firm said was “substantially oversubscribed,” with total capital commitments exceeding its target of $200 million.
A U.S. mineral and energy investment firm, Spicewood has been acquiring royalties since 2016 and is currently focused on purchasing royalty interests in the Permian Basin, Eagle Ford Shale, Haynesville Shale and Appalachian region.
Hong Kong’s Jumbo Floating Restaurant, which was exactly what it sounds like, sank in the South China Sea after encountering “adverse conditions” and taking on water.
Rail workers in the UK walked off the job in the biggest such strike in 30 years.
Broadway will lift its audience mask mandate on July 1.
Dow ends up over 600 points as stocks bounce back after worst week since 2020
The U.S. stock market closed sharply higher Tuesday, with the S&P 500 bouncing from its worst week...
The U.S. stock market closed sharply higher Tuesday, with the S&P 500 bouncing from its worst week since March 2020 as investors bought the dip amid concerns of an economic slowdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +2.15% jumped around 643 points to close more than 2% higher, while the S&P 500 SPX, +2.45% and Nasdaq Composite COMP, +2.51% each gained around 2.5%, according to preliminary FactSet data. Economic data released Tuesday showed that existing home sales in the U.S. fell 3.4% in May, a fourth straight month of declines amid rising mortgage rates.
The views of Summers — one of the most famous economists of his generation, serving in multiple Democratic administrations as well as in the presidency of Harvard University — are being taken very seriously these days. That wasn’t the case last year when he warned the Biden administration that its $1.9 trillion stimulus plan could worsen inflation.
His warnings were brushed off at the time by the White House, the Federal Reserve and most professional economists. No longer.
Oil prices score a partial rebound from last week’s sharp losses
West Texas Intermediate crude for July delivery ...
West Texas Intermediate crude for July deliveryCLCLN22, which expired at the end of the session, rose $1.09, or 1%, to settle at $110.65 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The most actively traded and now front-month contract, August WTI crude CL00CLQ22, added $1.53, or 1.4%, to settle at $109.52 a barrel. WTI slumped over 9% last week, ending a string of seven straight weekly advances.
August Brent crudeBRN00BRNQ22, the global benchmark, added 52 cents, or 0.5%, to $114.65 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe.
Back on Nymex, July gasolineRBN22 rose by less than a penny to $3.7945 a gallon, while July heating oil HON22 gained 0.4% to $4.3584 a gallon.
July natural-gas futuresNGN22 lost 2% to $6.808 per million British thermal units.