Investing,Energy - Top Stocks Blog: Talk about the most noteworthy stocks in the market each day – MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Browse by Tags

All Tags » Investing » Energy (RSS)

Related Tags:

  • Why Congress can't cut gas to $2 a gallon

    Posted Jun 24 2008, 09:50 AM by Bradley Meacham
    Filed under: ,
    Rating:

    This post was written by MSN Money columnist Tim Middleton.

    Something in the water in Washington turns people into gas bags, evidently, because the idea that financial speculation has doubled the price of gasoline is ludicrous.

    Yet four Wall Street analysts told a congressional committee yesterday that if Congress reined in the oil-futures market, gasoline prices would fall almost immediately to $2 a gallon.

    Charles Ober, manager of T. Rowe Price New Era, said he was struck by the "incredible lack of knowledge" on display at the hearings.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 52 comments) 18,723 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • North Dakota oil discovery called biggest in U.S.

    Posted Apr 10 2008, 03:53 PM by Jon Markman Rating:

    Watch out, Texas!  Get back California, Louisiana and Alaska! North Dakota and Montana are on track to knock all of you off your high horses as the oil capital of the United States.

    According to a government report published today that has stunned the energy biz, a thin layer of rock known as the Bakken Shale, located a couple of miles under the Badlands, holds up 4.3 billion barrels of recoverable oil, making it the single largest oil reservoir that federal scientists have ever assessed. 

    At today’s price of $110 per barrel, that puts the value at $475 billion, give or take a few bill, or more than enough to make people think ND stands for North Dallas. Or maybe that’s New Dhabi. 

    The U.S. Geological Survey only assessed the Bakken Shale in U.S. boundaries, so the full extent of the find, which stretches north into the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, will ultimately be larger. Already the estimate for “technically recoverable” oil – or that which is exploitable using current technology -- is 25 times higher than the last time the USGS surveyed the area, in 1995.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 448 comments) 115,002 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this