Halliburton Company

NYSE: HAL
$29.47
-$0.06 (-0.2%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

HAL Articles

Wednesday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Altera, Amazon.com, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Halliburton, MGIC Investment, Nokia, SAP and Teva Pharmaceutical.
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include GE, IBM, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Encana, Halliburton, Rio Tinto and WhiteWave Foods.
Halliburton reported better-than-expected first-quarter 2015 results before markets opened Monday morning.
Deutsche Bank believes oil market supply and demand fundamentals are beginning to tighten, but that this upcycle will be far more subdued.
Oppenheimer lowered its earnings estimates and price targets on Baker Hughes, Halliburton and Schlumberger based on its U.S. rig count analysis.
Here are six oil and gas stocks that were featured with fresh Buy or Outperform ratings by Wall Street analysts in the past week.
The oil services trade is still a contrarian one, to say the least. The pain in the industry is not going away anytime soon, so sticking with the top names that weathered downturns before makes the...
Recently, Bloomberg put together numbers that showed low oil prices have already caused the loss of 100,000 jobs within the industry worldwide.
ThinkstockHalliburton Co. (NYSE: HAL) announced to its employees on Tuesday that the company would lay off between 5,000 and 6,500 employees due to low crude oil prices and the concomitant slowdown...
Weatherford International has begun firing employees and said it had targeted a reduction of 8,000, mostly in the Western Hemisphere, by the end of June.
Two of the world’s largest oilfield services companies reported fourth-quarter and full-year 2014 results before markets opened Tuesday morning.
Baker Hughes and Halliburton are both scheduled to report their fourth-quarter results Tuesday before the U.S. markets open.
Corporate earnings season is upon us, and 24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of some of the larger reporting companies for the coming week.
If there is one major city in the United States that doesn't want oil to remain at or under $50 per barrel for very long, it has to be Houston.
The collapse of the oil price has created losers and winners, and the trick for investors is figuring out which side of the trade to be on.