- July 23rd, 2024
Gas: Prices little changed on flat demand, Freeport LNG resumption
Dutch and British wholesale gas prices were little changed on Tuesday morning as demand was flat and the U.S. Freeport LNG export plant resumed shipments. ›
Dutch and British wholesale gas prices were little changed on Tuesday morning as demand was flat and the U.S. Freeport LNG export plant resumed shipments. ›
Oil prices steadied on Tuesday after falling for the past two sessions, as investors remained cautious amid expectations of plentiful supplies and weak demand, while brushing off the U.S. presidential campaign upheaval. ›
Oil prices rose in Asia on Monday as investors watched for further signs that the U.S. might start to cut interest rates as soon as September. ›
European natural gas prices declined to the lowest level in a week as supply risks abated with the partial restart of the Freeport LNG plant in Texas. ›
Oil prices steadied on Thursday as investors wrestled with mixed signals about crude demand, with concerns about an economic slowdown in the U.S. contending with rising expectations the Federal Reserve would soon cut interest rates. ›
Oil prices extended gains on Thursday, buoyed by a bigger than expected decline in crude stocks in the United States, the world’s largest oil consumer. ›
Oil prices eased on Wednesday, with global benchmark Brent hovering near a one-month low hit in the prior session on signs of weakening demand in China, although losses were capped by declining U.S. oil stockpiles. ›
Oil prices slipped on Tuesday on worries about a slowing Chinese economy crimping demand, though a growing consensus that the U.S. Federal Reserve will begin cutting its key interest rate as soon as September limited declines. ›
Dutch and British gas prices edged lower on Monday morning as expectations of strong output from wind farms curbed gas demand from gas-fired power plants. ›
Oil held its ground on Monday, with political uncertainty in the U.S. and the Middle East supporting prices, offsetting downward pressure from a stronger dollar and weak demand in top importer China. ›