
Oil prices climb on US-EU trade optimism, Russian gasoline cuts
Brent crude futures gained 17 cents, or 0.3%, to $69.35 a barrel by 0027 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures climbed 15 cents, or 0.2%, to $66.18 per barrel.
Oil settled 1% higher on Thursday, driven by media reports of expected cuts to Russian gasoline exports. This overshadowed news of Chevron Corp (CVX.N), opens new tab potentially securing U.S. approval to resume production in Venezuela.
President Donald Trump's administration is preparing to allow limited oil operations in the sanctioned OPEC nation, the Wall Street Journal reported.
U.S. crude inventory draws and hopes for a trade deal between the U.S. and the EU for lower tariffs were lifting futures, which fell earlier in the week over fears of a worsening global trade war.
"I am encouraged by the way crude oil held and bounced away from the $65/64 support band this week, which keeps hopes intact of a rebound back towards $70," said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG.
U.S. Energy Information Administration data on Wednesday showed crude inventories fell last week by 3.2 million barrels to 419 million barrels, far exceeding analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 1.6 million-barrel draw.
Two European diplomats said on Wednesday that the EU and the U.S. were moving toward a trade deal that could include a 15% U.S. baseline tariff on EU imports and possible exemptions. That could pave the way for another major trade agreement following a deal with Japan.
Investors will also be turning their focus to upcoming economic data next week from the world's top two economies and largest oil consumer - factory activity data from China and key U.S. indicators such as inflation, jobs and inventory data.
"It is a big week next week data-wise," IG's Sycamore said.
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Reuters
16 minutes ago
- Reuters
The most precarious job in America's boardrooms: CEO
NEW YORK, July 29 (Reuters) - U.S. companies are removing their CEOs at the fastest clip in two decades, data shows, as increased scrutiny from shareholders and boards result in reduced tolerance for sub-par returns or wayward conduct. At least 41 CEOs have exited S&P 500 companies so far this year, compared with 49 for all of 2024 – making the fastest pace on an annualized basis since 2005, according to data from nonprofit executive research group The Conference Board and data analytics company ESGAUGE. In the latest example, consumer goods company Procter & Gamble (PG.N), opens new tab, the maker of Tide laundry detergent and Bounty paper towels, said on Monday CEO Jon Moeller will be replaced next year by longtime executive Shailesh Jejurikar. Moeller, who has been CEO since 2021, will become executive chairman, a powerful role on the board that allows the former chief to retain a strong voice in company affairs. Before that in the last three weeks alone Tylenol-maker Kenvue (KVUE.N), opens new tab replaced its CEO and health care products distributor Henry Schein (HSIC.O), opens new tab said its CEO will leave at year's end. In interviews, more than a dozen executive recruiters, investors, bankers, lawyers and industry advisers attributed the high turnover this year to a range of reasons, some building up from economic and social changes since the Covid-19 pandemic. While high inflation, geopolitical instability and the Trump administration's trade war has complicated the job of CEOs, diversity gains made boards more independent and demanding of the person in the top job, these people said. At the same time, in a stock market setting new records but driven mostly by large tech names, underperformance had given activist investors, who push for corporate changes from selling a division to buying back more stock, greater sway, leading to management changes. "Trying to fire the CEO has become a referendum on what's perceived to be a failed company strategy," said Peter da Silva Vint, managing partner at consulting firm Jasper Street, which works with companies facing pressure from activist investors. "And investors have become more comfortable with it as a mechanism to send a message." CEOs at companies that are lagging their peers are most at risk for demands from activists, with almost half – 42% – of S&P 500 companies that changed leaders last year foundering in the bottom 25th percentile for total shareholder returns, according to a November study, opens new tab led by The Conference Board. Take the case of Kenvue, where the board said it was replacing CEO Thibaut Mongon "to unlock shareholder value and reach its full potential" after the stock had lost 16.5% since its spin out from Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N), opens new tab two years ago. In contrast the S&P 500 has climbed 41% since August 2023, when Kenvue became a fully independent company. Kenvue took action after three U.S. hedge funds -- Starboard Value, Tom's Capital and Third Point – agitated for change at the company, and Starboard CEO Jeffrey Smith got a board seat in March to settle that hedge fund's proxy fight. The battle at Kenvue continues, however. The other two funds continue to agitate for more changes, including divesting assets and possibly selling the entire company, according to people familiar with the matter. With a new CEO on board investors, are confident a sale is sure to follow, the sources said. Kenvue declined to comment, Mongon could not be reached for comment and the hedge funds did not respond to requests for comment. "Activist investors are feeling more empowered, and if they have bought into a company's five-year plan then they want someone to exercise it," said Georgetown University professor Jason Schloetzer, an expert in corporate governance. "And if the guy at the top can't do it, they'll find the next one." Beyond shareholder activism and performance, changes in the makeup of boards over the past decade when there had been a new focus on adding diversity was also playing a role in the shakeup at the top, corporate governance experts said. Such boards were acting with greater independence, putting CEOs on tighter leash, these people said. "Newer members have more objectivity relative to prior generations," said Jason Baumgarten, head of global board and CEO practice at executive recruitment firm Spencer Stuart. Another factor in the high CEO turnover: less tolerance of unethical behavior, especially after the #MeToo movement. Questions over personal conduct led to the departure of at least two of the 40 CEOs at S&P 500 -- at Kroger (KR.N), opens new tab and Kohl's (KSS.N), opens new tab. Representatives for the companies did not respond to requests for comment and the former executives could not be reached for comment. But the trend goes beyond publicly traded companies as well. Earlier this month, Andy Byron, the married CEO at privately held technology company Astronomer, left his position after a video of him embracing the firm's human resources chief Kristin Cabot, who is not his wife, at a Coldplay concert went viral. Astronomer did not respond to a request for comment and Byron could not be reached. Reputational risk and corporate culture have become central to a company's long-term value, Jasper Street's da Silva Vint said. "Today's boards are far more willing to act decisively, removing executives, not only to enforce policy, but to protect shareholder, employee and public trust," he said.


Reuters
16 minutes ago
- Reuters
US, China finish talks in Stockholm as tariff truce holds for now
STOCKHOLM, July 29 (Reuters) - U.S. and Chinese officials finished two days of talks in Stockholm on Tuesday that were aimed at tackling longstanding economic disputes and stepping back from an escalating trade war between the world's two biggest economies. While announcing no breakthroughs, China's top trade negotiator Li Chenggang said the two sides agreed to push for an extension of a 90-day tariff truce struck in mid-May, without specifying when and for how long such an extension could come into force. The talks could pave the way for a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping later in the year, though Trump denied going out of his way to seek one and Chinese officials did not mention it. After months of threatening high tariffs on trading partners, Trump has secured trade deals with the European Union, Japan, and others, but China's powerhouse economy and grip on global rare earth flows make these talks particularly complex. Both sides in May walked back from imposing triple-digit tariffs on each other in what would have amounted to a bilateral trade embargo. But global supply chains and financial markets could face renewed turmoil without an agreement. Underlining the stakes, the International Monetary Fund on Tuesday raised its global growth forecast but flagged a potential rebound in tariff rates as a major risk.


BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Scotland gives Trump three things he likes - and one thing he doesn't
A list of Donald Trump's favourite things would be very unlikely to include raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens (as Julie Andrews famously sang in The Sound of Music).Instead, the president's list would surely have on it playing golf, a way to brazenly promote his commercial interests and, thirdly, trade deals that generate billions of dollars for the United wonder he looks so pleased with himself - his working holiday in Scotland has delivered on all three of these passions. On what was billed as a "private visit" he got a lot of work is taking home with him a trade deal with the EU which is not only the largest in history, it is also extremely favourable to the EU will spend hundreds of billions of dollars buying American energy and military equipment as well as investing billions more in the US return European goods will be subject to a 15% tariff when they are exported to the US rather than the 30% Mr Trump had threatened. The deal is an important achievement for Trump to be able to boast about, even if he has failed to conclude the "90 deals in 90 days" he had also seemed to relish hosting Sir Keir and Lady Starmer at his Turnberry golf resort on pictures - Trump's trip to ScotlandWinners and losers in US-EU deal It was a peculiar spectacle, the British prime minister being welcomed as guest in his own the PM was prepared to overlook the protocol when he was being treated to an unusual and valuable amount of face time with the US is, after all, a man whose foreign policy is abnormally influenced by his personal relations with other world talks were dominated by the crisis in Gaza. Starmer appeared to make some headway as he pressed Trump to use his influence to get more food into the Palestinian territory. Trump said afterwards that the US would work with the UK and other European partners to set up food centres, adding that he will tell Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to ensure that food gets to people who need it. "I want to make sure they get the food, every ounce of food".He also seemed to give the green light to Starmer to officially recognise the state of Palestine even though that is not something the US will do. "I'm not going to take a position, I don't mind him taking a position," he also made a significant change to his position on the conflict in revealed that he is now giving Russian President Vladimir Putin only 10-12 days to agree to a ceasefire, not the 50 days he had previously given him. "There's is no reason in waiting… I want to be generous but we just don't see any progress being made."How Trump uses golf for political advantage All of these major announcements were made during an exceptionally long, wide-ranging and free-wheeling press conference, during which the US president appeared extremely was prepared to talk at length about anything from wind power to immigration, including his views on King Charles and the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan. There was one issue he could not escape, much as he perhaps wanted was inevitably asked about Jeffrey Epstein, as the long running controversy about why he is refusing to release all the files held by the US government on the deceased sex offender followed him across the Atlantic.A van displaying an old photograph of Trump at a party with Epstein was driving around Aberdeenshire to make sure the president could not escape the told us for the first time why he fell out with the disgraced financier many years ago, saying that Epstein had poached staff from Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and he refused to talk to him after he denied ever having sent a lewd drawing to Epstein (as reported by the Wall St Journal), claiming that he only ever draws very basic pictures of intrusion of the Epstein scandal into Trump's Scottish trip was a reminder of what inevitably awaits him on his return to Washington but it did not seem to dent his buoyant Epstein case is tearing apart MAGAWhat do we know about the Epstein files? A few anti-Trump protests were staged. But they were largely kept away from the president himself and were remarkably muted compared with previous most determined demonstrators were Trump fans who turned out to greet him as he landed in Prestwick and at both golf resorts, holding large signs welcoming him to president also took every opportunity to use this trip to proudly promote his two Scottish golf hosted the press conferences with Starmer and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen in the newly renovated ballroom at Turnberry, boasting of the opulent new ceiling and brand new windows at the same time as discussing famine in Gaza. Arriving in Aberdeenshire with Starmer on board his Marine One helicopter, he took a couple of laps to show off the new golf course before talks with John Swinney on Tuesday morning, he had the Scottish first minister attend the official opening of the Trump International Golf Links in the village of Balmedie, along with several VIPs and a phalanx of TV is exceptionally unusual for a US president to so nakedly use his office to promote his own commercial interests but it is something Donald Trump clearly revels in as much as he enjoys playing golf. Which he managed to do on almost every day of this trip.