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When oil prices change, it affects your energy costs—and even the price of everyday items. Here’s why.
As oil supply disruptions return to center stage, these two energy stocks could emerge as timely winners in a shifting market landscape.
Oil prices are rising now, but they will eventually fall if history is any guide; here's what you need to know when that happens.
The Bank of England has held its main interest rate at 3.75% in the wake of rising oil and gas prices following the start of the Iran war.View on euronews
The Iran war has driven oil prices to their highest levels in years. Now, a wave of attacks in the past 24 hours on energy production sites across the Middle East have turned the spotlight on another crucial fossil fuel: liquefied natural gas, or LNG.
Proposals Thursday from the Federal Reserve, FDIC and OCC, combined with earlier reforms, mean capital requirements for the smallest banks could be reduced by 7.8%.
Attacks on Qatar's LNG hub and Saudi and Kuwaiti refineries push oil up 65% for the month and send European gas prices to 3-year highs
Analysts remain cautiously optimistic after the Fed’s hawkish stance, expecting a low volatility regime ahead of the quarterly options expiry.
Everything you need to know before you reach the office this morning.
The Federal Reserve chair is undecided on continuing to serve as a governor at the central bank but said he won’t leave while a Justice Department probe is still active.
U.S. stock futures retreated along with markets in Europe and Asia, while oil prices jumped and natural gas prices surged after the latest round of attacks on Middle Eastern energy facilities.
Oil prices are set to hit $150 per barrel or more as the escalating Middle East war, marked by intense Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, creates a severe global supply shock.
March S&P 500 E-Mini futures (ESH26) are down -0.18%, and March Nasdaq 100 E-Mini futures (NQH26) are down -0.27% this morning as oil prices continued to rise amid escalating fighting in the Middle East.
Markets are talking more about stagflation these days. But Fed Chair Jerome Powell doesn't see it.