oil and gas

oil and gas Articles

We wanted to look up and down the alternative energy sector patch to see just how bad the carnage was on Monday, March 9, 2020.
24/7 Wall St. has tracked more than 35 analyst downgrades in the oil patch on Monday, after a Saudi-Russia price war on top of the coronavirus outbreak knocking demand for oil.
Oil and gas companies are taking the brunt of investor punishment Monday morning, with some stocks trading down 40% from their Friday closing price.
The International Energy Agency has forecast that demand for oil in 2020 will be lower than demand in 2019. That hasn't happened since the financial crisis of 2009.
If the wider spread of COVID-19 wasn't bad enough for the public and the markets, now an oil price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia is pouring salt on the wounds.
Exxon Mobil told investors Thursday that it plans to keep investing in exploration and discovery. Investors and analysts were not amused.
The stock market has been unforgiving to the oil sector so far in 2020. Many investors are puzzled by the lack of interest and outright disdain that the stock market has for the top energy stocks.
It is hard to imagine any positive aspect of the coronavirus which is taking lives, roughing up markets, and pushing parts of the world toward recession. However, the drop in oil prices will steepen...
New building efficiency programs, more investment in nuclear energy and grid modernization are all included in the new American Energy Innovation Act. It is good enough?
Short interest in oil and gas stocks was mixed in the reporting period that ended February 14. Crude prices did not begin to tumble until a week later, however.
Oil and gas companies' contributions to members of Congress and congressional candidates have more than doubled since 2010. Are the companies getting their money's worth? Yes, and new research shows...
The energy sector dropped more than 4.5% Monday to continue its slide since the beginning of the year.
The impact of the spreading coronavirus has hit the energy sector particularly hard. Here are some of Monday's biggest losers.
These two top conventional oil and gas plays and a clean energy pick could be poised for continued massive runs. They have solid free-cash-flow potential, a metric Wall Street is very focused on now.
Argus downgraded Transocean fon Wednesday, in the wake of an earnings report that continued to show losses and concerns about challenging offshore drilling conditions, despite the company having a...