US shale efficiency drive is paying off, at least for now
Recent gains in well productivity by companies such as Pioneer...
Recent gains in well productivity by companies such as Pioneer Natural Resources, ConocoPhillips, and Occidental Petroleumreflect successful efforts to optimize efficiency in the US shale sector. While these improvements have brought short-term relief, shrinking inventories, declining quality, steepening decline curves, and growing competition for drilling acreage complicate the pursuit of continuous shale production growth.
U.S. crude oil stocks likely fell by almost 2.5 million barrels last week, with a...
U.S. crude oil stocks likely fell by almost 2.5 million barrels last week, with a build almost as large in distillates and a slight drop in gasoline stocks, petroleum industry group API indicated in a preliminary report on Tuesday ahead of the official inventory data from the EIA, today.
The petroleum industry group reported a crude build of 6.195M barrels in the prior week to Aug 11.
Along with the broader crude stockpile gain it reported for last week, the API cited a slide of 2.21M barrels last week at the Cushing, Oklahoma hub that takes delivery of U.S. crude. In the prior week, the API reported a Cushing deficit of 1.0M barrels.
The energy sector is off to a lower start, pressured by weakness...
The energy sector is off to a lower start, pressured by weakness in crude oil contracts. Meanwhile, the broader market futures are higher as investors wait for quarterly results from Nvidia and ahead of this year’s annual economic symposium at Jackson Hole.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are extending losses for the third consecutive day, as optimism for a strong rebound in demand dimmed amid gloomy global manufacturing data, ahead of the U.S. PMI print due later today. Market participants are also keeping an eye out for any comments that may provide clues on the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy path at this year's annual meeting at Jackson Hole. Manufacturing results have been dull so far, with Japan reporting shrinking factory activity for a third straight month in August. Traders also digested a decline in Eurozone business activity and a modest decrease in Britain’s economy. API data showed crude stocks fell by 2.4 million barrels last week, slightly smaller than the 2.9 million barrel decrease analysts were expecting.
Natural gas futures are adding to yesterday’s gains, on expectations for a build of +30 to +35 Bcf vs the 5-yr average of +49 Bcf in tomorrow’s EIA weekly inventory report.
Benchmark U.S. crude oil for September delivery...
Benchmark U.S. crude oil for September delivery fell 37 centsto $80.35 a barrel Tuesday. Brent crudefor October delivery fell 43 cents to $84.03 a barrel.
Wholesale gasolinefor September delivery rose 2 centsto $2.79 a gallon. September heating oilrose 2 cents to $3.14 a gallon. September natural gasfell 7 centsto $2.56 per 1,000 cubic feet.
U.S. stocks finish mostly lower as bank shares slide
U.S. stocks finished mostly lower on Tuesday,...
U.S. stocks finished mostly lower on Tuesday, with only the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite clinging to gains, as poor retailer earnings, rising Treasury yields, and a slew of bank downgrades weighed on stocks. The S&P 500 SPX fell by 12.13 points, or 0.3%, to 4,387.63, according to preliminary closing data from FactSet. The Nasdaq CompositeCOMP gained 8.28 points, or 0.1%, to 13,505.87. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageDJIA fell by 174.72 points, or 0.5%, to 34,288.97. A gauge of bank stocks also finished lower as S&P Global downgraded several midsize U.S. banks.