Forbes – As with seemingly every other aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic, the fallout and recovery related to the U.S. oil and...
Reuters – A month after sellers had to pay nearly $40 a barrel to get rid of U.S. oil futures, the next...
Oilfield Technology – US oil producers have been expected for some time to have shut down oil production as a result of...
By: Scott Carpenter – Forbes – Bill Gilmer knows an economic bust when he sees one. In the 1980s, when oil prices...
Market Insider – Goldman Sachs is predicting a V-shaped bounce back in oil demand but expects the fuel to face a beating from...
By Leah McGrath Goodman, the Institutional Investor. The first-ever zero oil futures trade happened at 2:08 p.m. ET on Monday, April 20, during...
Reuters – Chesapeake Energy Corp said it would prepay a total of $25 million in incentive compensation to 21 top executives to...
BARRON’S – Using his fleet of drones, Dale Parrish tracks one of the most sensitive data points in the oil world: the...
S&P Global Platts – The associated natural gas production declines across US plays due to the crude price collapse and the coronavirus...
The coronavirus pandemic has emptied out cities around the world, causing a historic drop in oil demand just as production was reaching...
The U.S. stock market ended sharply lower Friday, in a broad selloff that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average fall almost 700 points.
The Dow Jones closed 1.6% lower, while the S&P 500 slumped 1.5% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.6%, according to preliminary data from FactSet. All three indexes ended Friday with back-to-back weekly declines as investors weighed a jobs report that was hotter than Wall Street anticipated.
In the bond market, Treasury yields rose Friday after a stronger-than-expected employment report. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note climbed Friday to 4.772%, the highest level since Nov. 1, 2023 based on 3 p.m. Eastern time levels, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
For the week, the Dow fell 1.9%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.9% and the Nasdaq shed 2.3%, the preliminary data from FactSet showed.
The U.S. added a bigger-than-expected 256,000 new jobs in December, but most of the increase was concentrated in just a few industries and there was little sign of reheating in a gradually cooling labor market. U.S. unemployment rate drops to 4.1% in December from 4.2%
Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast an increase of 155,000 new jobs in December.
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com| In a market update sent to Rigzone by the Rystad Energy...
By Sheila Dang -HOUSTON | REUTERS—U.S. oil major Chevron told Reuters that it plans...
A long-overlooked shale play in South Texas might finally be showing signs of promise,...
In the wake of President Donald Trump’s re-election in November 2024, his administration swiftly...
Chevron Corporation has announced plans to lay off approximately 600 employees at its former...
Over the past two decades, the U.S. shale revolution has dramatically transformed the global...
(UPI) — The Department of Interior on Thursday released an analysis of fossil fuel...
As oil prices sink to their lowest levels in four years and the risk...
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com|Where next for oil prices? That’s the question Stratas Advisors looked at in...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | Oil prices have been on the mend this...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | The average price of India’s crude oil imports...
On April 8, 2025, the Keystone Pipeline experienced a significant rupture near Fort Ransom,...
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