(Bloomberg) -- Oil posted its biggest weekly decline since February on signs of easing geopolitical risks in the Middle East, while traders continued to weigh the outlook for interest-rate cuts. Most ...
Oil posted its biggest weekly decline since February on signs of easing geopolitical risks in the Middle East, while traders continued to weigh the outlook for interest-rate cuts. West Texas ...
LONDON: Oil prices edged higher on Friday, but headed for their steepest weekly loss in three months as uncertainty about demand and high interest rates drove a sell-off limited by the prospect ...
NEW YORK, May 3 (Reuters) - Oil prices settled lower on Friday, and posted their steepest weekly loss in three months as investors weighed weak U.S. jobs data and possible timing of a Federal ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices rose in Asian trading hours on Friday, with global benchmark Brent set for its first weekly increase in three weeks on signs of improving global demand and slowing ...
Oil futures climbed Friday, contributing to gains for the week, as some economic data from the U.S. and China raised hopes for stronger crude demand. Oil prices have found additional support ...
Oil prices extended losses on Friday, May 3, 2024 and stayed on course for the steepest weekly loss in three months, as investors weighed lower-than-expected US jobs data and the timing of ...
The dollar was on track for its biggest weekly drop against the euro in two and a half months, breaking over the resistance level of US$1.0855. (Freepik pic) SINGAPORE: The dollar headed for its ...
(Bloomberg) -- Raw sugar futures headed for the biggest weekly drop in more than a month as investors are seen increasing their short positions on bets for large supplies. Most Read from Bloomberg ...
OIL prices edged up on Friday on the prospect of OPEC+ continuing output cuts, but the crude benchmarks were headed for the steepest weekly losses in three months on demand uncertainty and easing ...
The dollar headed for its biggest weekly fall versus the euro in two-and-a-half months on Friday as signs of cooling inflation and a softening U.S. economy raised the prospect of rate cuts.