crude oil prices

crude oil prices Articles

Now that June is underway, the recent recovery in unemployment and the continued surge in the stock market have managed to surprise just about everyone. These are also hard to fathom in the wake of...
Chesapeake appears headed towards bankruptcy, but will this save the company?
Many investors are looking for companies that can survive as things are for the next decade or longer. Here are 10 of the larger U.S. companies tied to oil and gas that are likely to still exist and...
Sometimes the best way to get a message out is visually. After all, there is an absolute media overload that occurs for many people who invest and for those who just watch the news. 24/7 Wall St. has...
U.S. crude oil production is expected to decline by 1.75 million barrels by next month, according to IHS Markit. Some production may resume, however, if prices remain above $30 a barrel, and more...
Oil industry analysts at IHS Markit forecast the global over-production of crude will amount to 14 million barrels a day in the second quarter. About that much again is expected to go into storage.
Occidental Petroleum has become the poster child for pursuing a bad and expensive merger in oil and gas. And so, its future looks less than certain.
The energy sector will remain volatile, but scale buying shares now and being patient could bring some very solid gains for investors over the rest of 2020.
It seems impossible to think that a commodity price could trade below zero. Particularly when you are talking about oil, which still powers most of the world’s transportation at this time. While...
Oil and gas production companies have gotten a boost since Monday's crude oil price collapse. But it's only a small boost for the year to date.
24/7 Wall St. wanted to look for independent oil and gas players that are hedged on their oil production at much higher prices for 2020 and some even out to 2021.
Monday's plunging crude oil price lifted tanker stocks by double-digit percentages. How long can that last?
The International Energy Agency on Wednesday said that global oil demand would decline by 29 million barrels a day next month and end the year down by 2.7 million barrels a day.
Short interest in oil & gas producers mostly decreased in the two-week period ending March 31.
An agreement among the Saudis, the Russians, and the Americans over the weekend will lead to lower crude production beginning next month and, producers hope, higher prices.