Hess Corporation

NYSE: HES
$133.32
-$0.18 (-0.1%)
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HES Articles

Jon OggStocks were indicated lower after a dovish FOMC meeting and going into the first look at GDP in the second quarter. The rally from Tuesday and Wednesday was yet another sign of proof...
Independent oil and gas producer Hess says it had sold a 50% stake it its midstream assets in the Bakken shale play to Global Infrastructure Partners.
Monday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations Include Ambev, CTI BioPharma, Duke, Humana, Occidental Petroleum and Yelp.
It is one thing to try to catch the proverbial falling knife. It is quite another to have the patience and make sure a real turn is underway, as the Merrill Lynch team has done.
Wells Fargo made some broad calls on the oil market about what it sees coming for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, as well as for some major oil companies.
At its security analysts' day presentation Tuesday morning, Chevron said the company plans to grow net production by 20% by 2017.
When oilprices fall, a company may have trouble making interest payments, the cost of capital rises and sources of cash may dry up. The same can be said of sovereign governments and state governments.
Logically, it seems that as they stock market zooms higher, insiders who want to buy stock would wait until a pullback to add new capital.
In a new research report from Merrill Lynch, while they like the merits of large and small cap energy stocks, they concede that large cap is the place to buy now.
Friday's leading analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations from top research calls from around Wall Street include Altera, Chevron, Exxon, Discover Financial, LinkedIn and Lululemon Athletica.
Here are the six stocks that the Merrill Lynch team mentions in its most recent report for investors to look at now. Two oil stocks and four natural gas stocks are highlighted.
Tuesday, December 30, was the last time that the posted price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil topped $50 a barrel.
The dramatic drop in crude oil prices in the last half of 2014 has not yet slowed production in the Bakken play, but it has made it more difficult for producers to make a profit.
With the outlook for the oil probably darker than anytime in the past five years, Deutsche Bank recommends investors stay with the top large-cap leaders.
ThinkstockThe drop in the price of oil has felt monumental considering that the U.S. economy is still holding up well when the world’s growth engine is idling. This may be a welcome event for many...