The world’s biggest oil company is confident demand will pick up strongly this year as China reopens...
The world’s biggest oil company is confident demand will pick up strongly this year as China reopens its economy and the aviation market recovers.
“We are very optimistic in terms of demand coming back to the market,” Saudi Aramco’s chief executive officer, Amin Nasser, said in an interview. “We are starting to see good signs coming out of China. Hopefully, in the next couple of months, we’ll see more of a pickup in the economy there.”
Demand for jet fuel is now around 1 million barrels a day below pre-pandemic levels, according to Nasser, roughly half the figure from a year ago. “It’s picking up,” he said at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
Microsoft to Lay Off 10,000 Workers as It Looks to Trim Costs
Microsoft plans to lay off 10,000 workers, the company said Wednesday,...
Microsoft plans to lay off 10,000 workers, the company said Wednesday, as it looks to trim costs amid economic uncertainty and to refocus on strategic priorities, such as artificial intelligence.
The company employed about 221,000 workers as of the end of June, and the cuts amount to less than 5 percent of its global work force.
US stock futures edge higher early Wednesday. Meanwhile, the dollar gained against...
US stock futures edge higher early Wednesday. Meanwhile, the dollar gained against a slumping yen after the Bank of Japan made the surprise decision to keep yield-curve controls in place. Here are the latest market moves.
On the docket: Charles Schwab, Prologis Inc., and Kinder Morgan Inc, all reporting.
Proclaiming that “continuing to operate in Russia is not tenable,” the CEO of one of the major partners...
Proclaiming that “continuing to operate in Russia is not tenable,” the CEO of one of the major partners in the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline project said Jan. 17 that the oil and gas independent will exit Russia entirely.
Wintershall will take a one-time 5.3 billion euro non-cash loss as a result of its departure. This involves the company’s Russian joint ventures and impairments from Nord Stream AG and the WIGA Group midstream business.
“Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine is incompatible with our values and has destroyed cooperation between Russia and Europe,” Wintershall Dea CEO Mario Mehren said announcing the decision.
Scottsdale’s Super Bowl crackdown. The popular Phoenix suburb is fighting back against rentals on Airbnb and Vrbo as it prepares to host the big game. Locals say its 5,000 short-term rentals have had a detrimental effect on neighborhoods. Read more.
How a Chinese mole in the FBI was finally unearthed. Over the past decade, more than a dozen Chinese agents recruited by the CIA have been killed or imprisoned. Now it seems an FBI counterintelligence agent was largely responsible, per a new book. Get the full story.