Oil futures lost ground early Thursday, pulling back from two-week highs as investors...
Oil futures lost ground early Thursday, pulling back from two-week highs as investors assessed the supply outlook.
West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery was down $1.21, or 1.2%, at $103.04 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
June Brent crudefell $1.42, or 1.3%, to $107.36 on ICE Futures Europe. Both Brent and WTI ended at their highest since March 30 on Wednesday, based on front-month contracts.
Volumes were expected to be subdued at the end of a holiday-shortened week, with most markets set to be closed on Good Friday.
Unprecedented Helium Shortage Could Send Prices Sky-High
Worth 100x more than natural gas, the shale boom has taken on a new angle for exploration and production,...
Worth 100x more than natural gas, the shale boom has taken on a new angle for exploration and production, with the critical level of helium supplies igniting a land rush that could determine the future of innovation itself.
The bulk of the world’s helium reserves are found in natural gas fields, which means that these fields now have double the potential–and double the interest from a national security perspective.
Supply is now at a critical level, and the Russian war on Ukraine is compounding the supply crunch, stripping us of more global helium resources as the natural gas it is extracted with is hurriedly shipped off to Europe to stave off a crisis without stripping and liquifying the helium.
MarketWatch: U.S. Crude-Oil Inventories Climb by 9.4 Million Barrels
U.S. crude-oil inventories increased much more than expected last week as refiners surprisingly...
U.S. crude-oil inventories increased much more than expected last week as refiners surprisingly hit the brakes on activity, according to data released Wednesday by the Energy Information Administration.
Crude-oil stockpiles jumped by 9.4 million barrels to 421.8 million barrels, and are now about 13% below the five-year average, the EIA said. Analysts surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had predicted crude stockpiles would rise by just 400,000 barrels from the prior week.
Oil stored at Cushing, Okla., the delivery point for U.S. stocks, rose by 450,000 barrels from the previous week to 26.3 million barrels, the EIA said in its weekly report.
U.S. crude-oil production was unchanged from the previous week at 11.8 million barrels a day, according to the EIA.
U.S. stocks edge higher as earnings season kicks off, producer inflation runs hot
U.S. stock index futures tiptoed higher early Wednesday, shaking off premarket weakness seen after disappointing...
U.S. stock index futures tiptoed higher early Wednesday, shaking off premarket weakness seen after disappointing earnings from JPMorgan Chase & Co., as investors also weighed data showing wholesale inflation continues to run hot.
Stock-market bulls are looking for corporate earnings reports to take the focus away from the surge in inflation that has ratcheted up Federal Reserve interest rate-hike expectations and has sent Treasury yields sharply higher so far this year.
EIA—Haynesville natural gas production reached a record high in late 2021
New highs in dry natural gas production in the second half of 2021 were recorded in the Haynesville...
New highs in dry natural gas production in the second half of 2021 were recorded in the Haynesville shale play in northeastern Texas and northwestern Louisiana according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
The EIA said production has remained relatively strong in early 2022 and the Haynesville natural gas production accounted for nearly 13% of all U.S. dry natural gas production in February 2022.
Haynesville is the third-largest shale gas-producing play in the United States and an area where Oklahoma-based Chesapeake Energy continues to be active. ~Source: OK Energy Today