Five reasons why oil prices could move even higher
The most recent in a series of oil price rebounds we’ve seen this year has the market speculating which direction the price will move next.
The most recent in a series of oil price rebounds we’ve seen this year has the market speculating which direction the price will move next.
Traders are snapping up bets that Brent crude will rise to $80 a barrel as U.S. President Donald Trump mulls renewing sanctions on Iran while conflict roils parts of the Middle East.
While much of the world may be focused on President Trump’s threats of a trade war with China, Canada’s attention right now is on a commercial feud within its own borders.
President Donald Trump’s broadside against foreign oil producers on Friday took investors by surprise and included some notable inaccuracies about the state of the oil market.
As part of Volkswagen’s continued effort to seek repentance for the Dieselgate scandal, the German automaker is investing billions into electric cars.
It’s become an article of faith that, by the magic hand of Adam Smith, when gas prices go up people will drive less.
Oil prices jumped to their highest level since 2014 Wednesday, as worries about fighting in the Middle East spooked markets.
As Tesla has shown, not all fast charging is created equal. Now owners of the new 2018 Nissan Leaf are complaining that the car’s “fast” charging is not always as fast as advertised.
Saudi Arabia wants to get oil prices near $80 a barrel to pay for the government’s crowded policy agenda and support the valuation of state energy giant Aramco before an initial public offering.
Americans are spending more at the pump than they have in years. Prices could rise even higher just as drivers hit the road for family vacations.