Marathon Oil allocated $1.15 billion to activity in North America for 2016 with the majority focused on the Company’s three U.S. resource...
On June 2, Halcón Resources Corp. reported that on May 26, it was notified that the price of its common stock had...
I am continually analyzing a myriad of data streams in an effort to determine where best to invest in buying oil and...
The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil futures are currently trading at around $48 per barrel this morning. Baker Hughes Inc. reported another...
Halliburton Co., the firm that traces its beginnings to Duncan, Oklahoma, announced this week an increase in its latest quarterly dividend.
The energy sector is off to a mixed-to-lower start, seesawing in early trading amid weakness in the underlying commodities while major equity futures steadied after the Dow and S&P 500 both hit fresh record highs.
In earnings news, Halliburton reported 4Q results that topped analyst expectations, driven by strength in offshore and overseas markets. The company also raised its dividend and reported it returned $1.4 billion of cash to shareholders through stock repurchases and dividends in 2023, representing over 60% of its free cash flow.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are handing back some of the previous day's strong gains, slipping as traders weigh rising crude supply in Libya and Norway against simmering geopolitical tensions in several regions and domestic production outages. Norway's crude production rose to 1.85 million bpd in December, up from 1.81 million bpd the previous month and beating analysts' forecasts of 1.81 million bpd, according to the Norwegian Offshore Directorate. Meanwhile in Libya, production at the 300,000 bpd Sharara oilfield restarted on Jan. 21 after the end of protests that had halted output since early this month. Supply, however, remains constrained in the U.S. with as much as 20% of North Dakota's oil output still shut as of Monday night. Traders are also still assessing the Ukrainian drone strike on Novatek's Ust-Luga Baltic fuel export terminal yesterday and reports from last night that U.S. and British forces carried out a second joint round of strikes on Houthi positions in Yemen. Attention will start to shift the latest round of inventory reports which will give a clear read on the impact that weather-induced shutdowns over the last week had on production. Analysts expect that U.S. crude oil inventories will fall by about 3 million barrels in the week to Jan. 19.
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Merger and acquisition activity in the U.S. upstream oil and gas sector slowed significantly...
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