Search Results | Showing 101 - 110 of 438 results for %22Santos%22 |
| | ... $27.49, Rio Tinto had lifted 26 cents to $53.92, and Fortescue Metals had firmed four cents to $2.31. Oil and gas producer Santos was up six cents at $7.42, but Woodside Petroleum had fallen 52 cents to $34.54. The oil market has tumbled after OPEC said ... |
| | | ... and Fortescue Metals slid six cents to $2.28. But energy stocks did better thanks to the overnight rise in oil prices. Santos gained 24 cents to $7.60 in early trade, while Oil Search lifted 16 cents to $7.35. Woodside Petroleum was up 9.5 cents to $35.65 ... |
| | | ... sectors in the red and the oil sector is again the worst performer, which is no surprise," he said. In the energy sector, Santos was down 17 cents to $7.12 in early trade while Woodside Petroleum had dropped 78 cents to $35.58 and Oil Search had fallen ... |
| | | ... was always going to make things difficult for mining and energy stocks and that's exactly what we are seeing," he said. Santos was down 25 cents at $7.44 and Woodside Petroleum had dropped 42 cents to $36.63. BHP Billiton was down 51 cents at $28.65 ... |
| | | ... and Fortescue Metals dipped one cent to $2.46. Oil and gas supplier Woodside Petroleum was 27 cents higher at $34.46, and Santos was up 25 cents at $7.25. Construction giant Leighton Holdings was four cents richer at $21.74 after it said it would sell ... |
| | | ... at $29.37, Rio Tinto had shed 75 cents at $56.38, and Fortescue Metals was 11 cents lower at $2.55. Oil and gas producer Santos dropped 58 cents, or 6.99 per cent, to $7.72, and Woodside Petroleum reversed $1.04 to $34.35. Among the major banks, Westpac ... |
| | | ... markets retreated on profit-taking, with Shanghai tanking more than five per cent. Sydney-listed energy firms including Santos and BHP Billiton were hammered as crude continued to be bid down owing to an oversupply in world markets. Tokyo dipped 0.68 ... |
| | | ... back... there's not too much to cheer about at this stage," CommSec market analyst Stephen Daghlian said. Energy giant Santos slumped to its slowest level in ten years following the slide in oil prices, plus a credit rating downgrade from Standard and ... |
| | | ... is now "well and truly over," and this is discouraging overseas investment in Australian shares. "Energy stocks such as Santos and Oil Search have been hammered as a result of the fall of the oil prices, and the rest of the market is suffering from collateral ... |
| | | ... slight positive." Among energy stocks, oil and gas producer Woodside Petroleum added 72 cents, or 2.11 per cent, to $34.92, Santos gained 18 cents, or 1.98 per cent, to $9.29 while Oil Search rose 37 cents, or 5.08 per cent, to $7.66. Diversified mining ... |
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