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Oil prices have fallen and stock markets are clawing back some lost ground after Donald Trump raised hopes that Iran war disruption to the global economy would soon be over.
The BBC spoke to New Yorkers about how the conflict in Iran is driving up prices at the pump - and how it's impacting their wallets.
Saudi Arabia’s Aramco, the world’s top oil exporter, reported a 12-per-cent drop in annual profit mainly due to lower crude prices, but announced it would repurchase up to US$3-billion worth of shares ...
As the conflict blocks oil exports from the Gulf region, and producers start to cut output, the supply shock has rattled financial markets, driving up prices at the pump and raising fears of a bigger ...
Short-dated bonds are the most sensitive. In Britain, two-year gilt yields have shot up by nearly 50 basis points in the last ...
Attacks by the U.S. and Israel on Iran, and Iranian missile and drone attacks on neighboring countries, have disrupted oil and gas supplies to the rest of the world — ...
Chery UK continues its rapid expansion in the UK new car market with confirmation of the imminent arrival of the Tiggo 4. This slideshow requires JavaScript. The ...
The oil price spiked near $120 after strikes on Iran's energy sites and the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz. With tankers stuck and Gulf oil facilities hit, producers are running short on storage to ...