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Russia pounds Ukraine's energy sector, Kyiv prompts more air defence support
Russia launched a barrage of missiles and drones on Saturday that harmed energy centers and important facilities throughout Ukraine, hurting a minimum of 4 people, and prompting President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to concern a fresh plea for more air defence support. The 6th significant Russian air attack on the Ukrainian power sector considering that March damaged energy centers in the east, centre, and west, the national grid operator Ukrenergo said. Ukraine's air force stated it shot down 35 of 53 Russian missiles and 46 of 47 attack drones used for the strikes, which pile more pressure on Ukraine's hobbled energy system as the war with Russia is in its 3rd year. Russia's main objective is to normalize horror, to utilize the absence of enough air defence and determination of Ukraine's. partners, Zelenskiy said on the Telegram messaging app. Partners know precisely what is required. Extra Patriots. and other modern air defence systems for Ukraine. To speed up. and expand F-16 shipments to Ukraine. To provide our soldiers. with all the essential abilities. So far this year, Ukraine has discovered itself on the back foot. as it dealt with hold-ups in military aid from the United States,. magnified attacks on its infrastructure and Moscow's push to. expand the frontline, 27 months after its major intrusion. RESTORED ATTACKS ON POWER SECTOR On Saturday, Russian forces assaulted energy facilities in. the eastern Donetsk area, southeastern Zaporizhzhia and. Dnipropetrovsk regions, main Kyrovohrad area and. Ivano-Frankivsk area in the west, the energy ministry stated. Air alerts lasted for more than 3 hours across the. regions with many individuals hurrying for shelters in the middle of. the night. Lviv local guv Maksym Kozytskyi said 4 people. were hurt and 3 vital infrastructure facilities were. hit in the area on Ukraine's border with Poland. He gave no. further information on the centers. DTEK, Ukraine's largest private energy-generating business,. stated its 2 thermal power plants had actually been struck and devices. seriously damaged. Russia's defence ministry has said it is striking Ukraine's. military-industrial complex and energy centers in retaliation. for Kyiv's strikes on Russian energy centers. Ukraine has stepped up drone attacks on Russian oil. centers this year, trying to find a pressure point against. the Kremlin whose forces are slowly advancing in the eastern. Donbas area and have actually opened a brand-new front in the Kharkiv area. in the northeast. Russia pounded the Ukrainian energy system in the first. winter season of the war, and restored its attack on the grid in March. as Ukraine was running low on stocks of Western air defence. missiles. Ukrainian officials have stated the Western aid has begun to. arrive but Russian bombardments over the previous two months knocked. out the bulk of the thermal and hydropower generation, caused. blackouts, and pushed electrical energy imports to tape highs. The federal government was forced to nearly double customer. electrical energy tariffs to be able to money enormous repairs. It prepares. record electrical energy imports of about 27 megawatt hours
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Thyssenkrupp can't afford hold-ups over future of steel unit, chairman states
Thyssenkrupp's. chairman on Saturday safeguarded a transfer to offer a stake in the. group's steel system to Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky versus. the will of worker representatives, adding the company could not. manage to postpone important choices. Effective labour leaders at the German conglomerate, who hold. half the seats on its supervisory board, are in open dispute. with management, arguing they are being sidelined in. Thyssenkrupp's efforts to offer its steel organization TKSE. A strategy to offer 20% in the business to Kretinsky might just. be approved by the board since the vote of chairman Siegfried. Russwurm counts twice in the event of a stalemate. We have actually hit rough waters with the steel company. Time plays. a major role here. Specifically as Thyssenkrupp has been waiting. for too long, he told weekly Welt am Sonntag, including - in a. potential warning against strike action - that any suspension of. production could damage business. The steel business need to no longer be the risk that drags. down all other areas of the group. We require a service, not perhaps. or at some time, today. Russwurm did not eliminate utilizing his double vote in future. stalemates, including it was the responsibility of a chair to guarantee. suitable decisions are made. Germany's greatest union IG Metall previously this week stated. that TKSE needed 4 billion euros ($ 4.3 billion) in funds for a. standalone future. Thyssenkrupp wishes to develop a 50:50 steel. joint endeavor with Kretinsky and pare back funding. Russwurm said he anticipated all stakeholders to collaborate. to develop a future technique to ensure that TKSE, which has come. under pressure from high energy expenses and inexpensive Asian imports,. can be self-sustainable. Otherwise, it is only a matter of time before this company. no longer exists.
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Hess shareholder vote on Chevron offer quickly met bulk needed -filing.
Hess shareholders cast 157.6 million ' yes' votes in favor of its sale to Chevron, a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Friday revealed, more than 3 million more than required to pass. Tuesday's vote cleared one hurdle for the $53 billion deal, which is still under evaluation by U.S. regulators and involved in an arbitration battle with Exxon and CNOOC, Hess' partners in a profitable Guyana oil-production joint venture. Investor approval needed a yes vote by a bulk of Hess's 308 million shares outstanding, or about 154 million shares. The triumph for Hess came regardless of a campaign by some investors to advise abstention votes to give more time for the outcome of the Exxon-CNOOC arbitration to be chosen. The company did not reveal any votes to adjourn the conference, saying the proposition was not put forth since there sufficed votes in favor of the offer. Proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services had advised shareholders vote to abstain. ISS also got in touch with Hess to use its owners a monetary incentive offered the delay implied they would be without the higher dividend readily available to Chevron shareholders. Friday's securities filing was the very first time the variety of votes cast was revealed. Some 19.7 million shares were cast versus the deal and another 72.8 million stayed away. Hess shareholders stopped working to authorize a non-binding vote on executive compensation under the merger. They cast 112.9 million shares in favor of the pay plan and 109.9 million votes versus it. Some 27 million shares avoided the pay proposal, which needed a bulk of all votes cast to be approved.
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Coterra Energy to close GDS center in Marcellus Company System
Oil and gas manufacturer Coterra Energy Inc is planning to close its GasSearch Drilling Services (GDS) center to centralize operations at the Marcellus Business Unit in Lenox, Pennsylvania, the business stated on Friday. GDS Building And Construction and Roustabout Solutions departments have been gotten rid of together with particular positions within the maintenance and trucking departments, the Houston-based business stated in a declaration. Fifty-five staff members out of 170 have actually been laid off, local station WBRE TV reported, pointing out Coterra authorities. GDS was established in 2006 as a subsidiary of Coterra Energy. The trucking and upkeep departments and remaining assistance staff will be rearranged into one brand-new system focusing strictly on water hauling services. No additional personnel cuts are prepared, the business stated. Earlier this month, Coterra Energy's CEO said it continues to focus on slowing down activity and reducing expenses in Marcellus, citing difficult near-term gas markets. The business reported adjusted profits of 51 cents ?? per share for the quarter ended in March, below 87 cents in the year-ago period.
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United States diesel need for March hits 26-year seasonal low, EIA says
U.S. diesel need fell to its most affordable seasonal level in March since 1998, while petroleum output increased to a multimonth high, data from the U.S. Energy Details Administration revealed on Friday. Need for extract fuels, which includes diesel and heating oil, has actually been struck sharply this year under pressure from sluggish production activity, milder-than-expected winter weather condition and flourishing eco-friendly fuel supply. Products provided of distillate, EIA's procedure of demand, tipped over 6% from February to 3.67 million barrels per day (bpd) in March, lowest for the month because 1998. The two most immediate U.S. ultra-low sulfur diesel futures contracts settled in the steepest contango since 2020 on Friday. A market remains in contango when costs for commodities are lower now than for future deliveries. U.S. crude oil output rose by 0.6% to 13.2 million bpd in March, the highest since December, the data from EIA showed. Output from Texas, the top producing state, edged 0.7% greater to 5.6 million bpd in March, likewise the greatest given that December. Production in New Mexico, the 2nd largest producer, grew by 1.6% to 2 million bpd to its greatest on record for a 2nd straight month. Unrefined production in North Dakota, however, fell by 2.7% to 1.2 million bpd to its least expensive since January. Meanwhile, overall product supplied of oil and petroleum products fell 0.4% to 19.9 million bpd. Completed motor gasoline supplied increased 3.3% to 8.9 million bpd. Gross natural gas production in the U.S. Lower 48 states fell by about 3.0 billion cubic feet each day (bcfd) to 114.7 bcfd in March, down from 117.6 bcfd in February, according to EIA's monthly 914 production report. That compares to a regular monthly record 118.2 bcfd in December. In top gas-producing states, regular monthly output in March held stable in Texas at 34.6 bcfd, and fell 9.0% in Pennsylvania to 19.4 bcfd. That compares with monthly record highs of 35.0 bcfd in Texas in December 2023 and 21.9 bcfd in Pennsylvania in December 2021.
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Stocks rebound while dollar, Treasury yields fall after United States information
MSCI's global equities index staged an afternoon rebound on Friday as financiers repositioned for month-end, while the dollar fell with Treasury yields as information showed a modest increase in U.S. inflation in April. After spending most of the session in the red, the MSCI All Nation World Cost Index turned positive ahead of a rebalance of the index. When Wall Street trading ended, the international index was up 0.57% at 785.54 after falling as low as 776.86 earlier. When you get an upside reversal it's constantly an excellent sign if you're bullish, said Joe Saluzzi, head of Equity Market Structure Research and co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading. He mentioned month-end portfolio modifications for the late session purchasing. Before the market opened on Friday, the U.S. Commerce Department said the personal intake expenditures (PCE). price index, commonly seen as the Federal Reserve's favoured. inflation indicator, increased 0.3% last month, in line with. expectations and the March increase, while core PCE increased 0.2%,. compared with 0.3% in March. While some strategists said they were relieved inflation. wasn't hotter than expected, Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio. supervisor at Dakota Wealth in Fairfield, Connecticut said the information. didn't change much in terms of interest-rate expectations. The core PCE today didn't actually do anything ... It. was simply a status quo type of report so there is no sign. that the Federal Reserve is going to be on hold longer, or going. to cut rates faster. Separately the Chicago Buying Managers Index (PMI),. which monitors the health of manufacturing in the Chicago. region, fell to 35.4 from 37.9 last month and was well below. economist expectations of 41. For the week, the MSCI index was revealing its 2nd. consecutive decline however a monthly gain. On Wall Street , the Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 574.84. points, or 1.51%, to 38,686.32, the S&P 500 gained 42.03. points, or 0.80%, to 5,277.51 and the Nasdaq Composite. lost 2.06 points, or 0.01%, to 16,735.02. Previously, Europe's STOXX 600 index closed up 0.3%. While the index advanced 2.6% for the month it fell 0.5% for the. week in its 2nd successive weekly decline. Data showed euro zone inflation increased more than expected in. May, though experts stated it was not likely to stop the European. Central Bank from reducing loaning costs next Thursday however may. cement the case for a pause in July. In currencies, the dollar index, which measures the. greenback against a basket of currencies consisting of the yen and. the euro, fell 0.15% to 104.61 and was revealing its first monthly. decrease in 2024 after the data. The euro was up 0.16% at $1.0849 but against the. Japanese yen, the dollar strengthened 0.27% to 157.24. In Treasuries, yields fell after the indications of inflation. stabilization in April, recommending to some that the potential. for the Fed to cut rates later on this year stayed undamaged. The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell. 5.1 basis points to 4.503%, from 4.554% late on Thursday while the 30-year bond yield fell 3.4 basis points to. 4.6511% from 4.685%. The 2-year note yield, which usually moves. in step with rate of interest expectations, fell 5.2 basis points. to 4.8768%, from 4.929% late on Thursday. On the energy front, oil costs fell as traders focused on. Sunday's OPEC+ conference, which is anticipated to identify the fate. of the manufacturer group's output cuts. U.S. crude settled 1.18% at $76.99 a barrel and. Brent settled at $81.62, down 0.29% on the day. Gold fell 0.68% to $2,326.97 an ounce on the day however. was tracking for a fourth straight monthly gain.
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Oil calms down ahead of OPEC+ meeting, posts weekly loss
Oil rates fell on Friday and published a weekly loss as financiers awaited an OPEC+ conference on Sunday that will figure out the fate of the manufacturer group's. output cuts. Brent futures for July delivery were down 24 cents,. or 0.3%, to $81.62 a barrel, while the more liquid August. agreement was down 77 cents, or 0.8%, at $81.11. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) unrefined futures fell 92. cents, or 1.2%, at $76.99. For the week, Brent calmed down 0.6%, with WTI posted a 1%. loss. It's the uneasiness ahead of the OPEC conference over the. weekend, said Matt Smith, lead analyst at Kpler, referencing. the potential for the group to do something unanticipated. It's. extensively anticipated that they'll roll over the cuts, he included. Markets are awaiting the OPEC+ conference on Sunday, with the. manufacturer group working on a complicated deal that would enable it to. extend some of its deep oil production cuts into 2025, sources. told . Saudi Arabia welcomed ministers to gather face to face in Riyadt. for the June conference in a last minute change of plans, sources. said on Friday. The gathering is still formally arranged as. an online meeting. U.S. unrefined production rose in March to its greatest level. this year, information from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. ( EIA) revealed on Friday, while fuel item provided, a proxy for. need, fell 0.4% to 19.9 million barrels per day. The oil market has been under pressure in recent weeks over. the possibility of U.S. borrowing costs staying greater for longer,. which restrain funds and can curb oil demand. Both oil benchmarks were on course for their biggest monthly. decreases considering that December after dropping in the previous session. on a surprise build in U.S. fuel stocks. U.S. summer season travel season began with Memorial Day. weekend, with initial indications showing strong driving and. flying activity-- however fuel utilize looks more muted, suggesting. efficiency gains, Citi analysts wrote in a note. Oil rates rose briefly after U.S. government information revealed. inflation tracked sideways in April, reinforcing traders' bets. that the Fed would provide a long-awaited rate cut in September. Euro zone inflation increased more than anticipated in May, Eurostat. data revealed. The boost is not likely to prevent the European. Reserve bank from cutting borrowing expenses next week, however it. might slow the rate cutting cycle. U.S. energy firms held oil and gas rig count - an early. indication of future output - consistent at 600 in the week to May. 31, energy services firm Baker Hughes stated in its. carefully followed report on Friday. Oil rigs fell by one to 496 this week, while gas rigs rose. by one to 100. Nevertheless, the total rig count fell for the third month in a. row in May, coming by 13, the most in a month since August.? Money managers raised their net long U.S. crude futures. and alternatives positions in the week to May 28, the U.S. Product. Futures Trading Commission
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Stocks, dollar, Treasury yields fall after US information
An international equities gauge was lower on Friday while the dollar fell with Treasury yields as data showing a modest increase in U.S. inflation in April provided financiers little clearness on the Federal Reserve's interest-rate policy. The U.S. Commerce Department said the personal intake expenditures (PCE) cost index, extensively seen as the Fed's. favoured inflation indicator, increased 0.3% last month, in line. with expectations and the March increase, while core PCE increased. 0.2%, compared to 0.3% in March. While some strategists said they were relieved inflation. wasn't hotter than anticipated, Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio. manager at Dakota Wealth in Fairfield, Connecticut said the data. didn't change much in terms of interest-rate expectations. The core PCE this morning didn't truly do anything ... It. was just a status quo kind of report so there is no indicator. that the Federal Reserve is going to be on hold longer, or going. to cut rates quicker. Individually the Chicago Buying Managers Index (PMI),. which keeps an eye on the health of manufacturing in the Chicago. area, was up to 35.4 from 37.9 last month and was well below. economic expert expectations of 41. MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe fell. 0.98 points, or 0.13%, to 780.14 at 02:47 p.m. ET. It was. tracking its 2nd weekly decrease in a row but heading for a. month-to-month gain. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was. up 271.99 points, or 0.71%, at 38,383.47, the S&P 500 was. down 11.62 points, or 0.22%, at 5,223.86 and the Nasdaq. Composite fell 190.39 points, or 1.14%, to 16,546.69. Previously, Europe's STOXX 600 index closed up 0.3%. While the index advanced 2.6% for the month it fell 0.5% for the. week in its 2nd consecutive weekly decline. Information revealed euro zone inflation increased more-than-expected in. May, though analysts stated it was unlikely to stop the European. Central Bank from lowering borrowing costs next Thursday however may. cement the case for a pause in July. In currencies, the dollar index, which determines the. greenback versus a basket of currencies including the yen and. the euro, fell 0.12% to 104.64. It was on track for its first. month-to-month decline in 2024 after the information. The euro was up 0.11% versus the dollar at $1.0844. But versus the Japanese yen, the dollar strengthened. 0.27% to 157.22. In Treasuries, yields fell after the signs of inflation. stabilization in April, suggesting to some that the capacity. for the Fed to cut rates later on this year stayed undamaged. The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell. 4.4 basis points to 4.51%, from 4.554% late on Thursday while. the 30-year bond yield fell 3.5 basis indicate. 4.6501%. The two-year note yield, which usually moves in. step with interest-rate expectations, fell 3.6 basis indicate. 4.8914%, from 4.929% late on Thursday. On the energy front, oil prices fell as traders concentrated on. Sunday's OPEC+ conference, which is anticipated to identify the fate. of the producer group's output cuts. U.S. unrefined settled down 1.18% at $76.99 a barrel and. Brent settled at $81.62, down 0.29% on the day. Gold fell 0.81% to $2,324.17 an ounce on the day but. was tracking for a 4th straight month-to-month gain.
Louis Dreyfus Orders Pair of New CTVs from Strategic Marine
Singaporean shipbuilder Strategic Marine has secured an order from Louis Dreyfus Amateurs for an additional pair of crew transfer vessels (CTVs) to expand its fleet from five to seven high-specification vessels.
The 27-meter CTVs represent sister ships to Acti’Vent and Esti’Vent, and will be able to transport 24 passengers each.
The two new CTVs, of StratCat 27 design, are expected to be delivered early in 2025.
“These new orders are part of our strategy to expand our Offshore Renewables business in France and in Europe. We are anticipating the future needs of the rapidly evolving French offshore wind industry,” said Gaël Cailleaux, the Renewables Managing Director at Louis Dreyfus Armateurs.
“We believe these vessels will significantly improve operational efficiency and safety for our client. Since its introduction, our StratCat 27s have seen successful deployments in key European markets and rapidly growing markets in Asia such as Taiwan and Korea,” added Chan Eng Yew, CEO of Strategic Marine.