(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.
Oil prices steadied on Friday after weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs data, but kept on course for their steepest weekly loss in three months, weighed by concerns about demand and high interest ...
Oil futures head for modest weekly gains on Friday as some economic data from the U.S. and China raised hopes for stronger ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices rose in Asian trading hours on Friday, with global benchmark Brent set for its first weekly ...
Oil prices steadied on Friday, with global benchmark Brent set for its first weekly gain in three weeks as economic ...
NEW YORK: Oil prices rose 2% on Friday, posting their biggest weekly gains in over a year, as energy firms began shutting U.S. production in the Gulf of Mexico ahead of a major hurricane expected ...
The dollar headed for its largest 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. April's ...
Olive oil has soared in price more than any other food or drink item, with one litre now setting consumers back £8.04 ...
By Rashid Husain Syed Oil market prices have remained tightly confined within a specific range and have struggled to break out. Last Friday marked the largest weekly drop since February. Benchmark ...
Oil futures finished higher on Thursday, building on the gain seen in the previous session after U.S. data showed an ...
Oil prices edged lower on Friday, and were on course for their steepest weekly loss in three months, as investors weighed ...