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By Mark Shenk, Bloomberg |
April 18, 2013
West Texas Intermediate crude rose from a four-month low on signals that recent losses were exaggerated and as Spain sold more debt than planned.
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By Lorraine Woellert, Bloomberg |
March 19, 2013
New U.S. home construction rose in February and building permits climbed to the highest level in almost five years, adding to signs of progress in the housing market that’s helping boost the economy.
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By Barbara Powell, Bloomberg |
March 6, 2013
Gasoline sank as the Energy Information Administration reported East Coast stockpiles increased and imports jumped. Crack spreads narrowed.
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By Elizabeth Campbell, Bloomberg |
September 13, 2012
Commodities surged to a five-month high after the Federal Reserve announced a third round of fiscal measures to bolster the U.S. economy, fueling expectations that raw-material use will increase.
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By Joe Richter, Bloomberg |
September 10, 2012
CME Group Inc. is betting that a surge in demand for recycled steel and price swings will drive trading in its new scrap futures.
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By Colin McClelland and Yee Kai Pin |
July 4, 2012
Oil slid from its highest level in a month in New York as the dollar rose amid speculation that this week’s gains have been excessive.
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By Ayesha Daya and Nayla Razzouk, Bloomberg |
June 13, 2012
Divisions within OPEC signal the group will probably keep its crude production ceiling unchanged tomorrow as falling prices limit Saudi Arabia’s ability to justify a higher quota.
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By Mark Shenk, Bloomberg |
June 1, 2012
Commodities extended their decline, touching the lowest level in almost eight months, after U.S. employers created fewer jobs than economists estimated and Chinese manufacturing slowed.
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By Julie Johnsson and Naureen S. Malik, Bloomberg |
May 7, 2012
U.S. utilities led by Southern Co. are burning a record amount of natural gas for generating electricity without triggering a forecasted boost to the fuel’s price from near 10-year lows.
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By Mark Shenk, Bloomberg |
May 4, 2012
Oil fell below $100 a barrel for the first time since February as U.S. employers added fewer workers than forecast