WLL

Energy prices that were soaring in Thursday's premarket dipped lower in the first half-hour of the regular session.
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included AutoZone, Best Buy, Bloomin' Brands, EOG Resources, Lemonade, Micron Technology, QuantumScape, Stitch Fix and Twilio.
Wednesday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included Applied Materials, Caterpillar, Costco Wholesale, JPMorgan, Spotify, Vertex Pharmaceutical, Vornado Realty Trust and Whiting Petroleum.
Thursday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included Best Buy, Booking, ConocoPhillips, CRISPR Therapeutics, Fisker, Halliburton, Lordstown Motors, RH, Tesla, Walt Disney and Zscaler.
Wednesday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included Dave & Buster's, Kohl's, Micron Technology, NetApp, Peloton Interactive, Salesforce.com, Slack, Verizon Communications and Whiting Petroleum.
Friday's top analyst calls included Akebia Therapeutics, Broadcom, DocuSign, Lululemon Athletica, NextEra Energy, Overstock.com, Shopify and Wayfair.
Thursday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included AGCO, Ambarella, Bank of America, Beyond Meat, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Costco Wholesale, CrowdStrike, Eli Lilly, JPMorgan, MongoDB, SmartSheet...
Oil and gas producer Whiting emerged from a prepackaged bankruptcy on Wednesday. New shares opened at around $15 a share.
Oil and gas production companies have gotten a boost since Monday's crude oil price collapse. But it's only a small boost for the year to date.
Oil and gas producer Whiting Petroleum has filed for bankruptcy reorganization in which the company is essentially exchanging debt for new stock and new owners.
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades included Apache, Broadcom, Caterpillar, Dollar General, Microsoft, NXP Semiconductors, Salesforce.com, Sirius XM, Slack and Yelp.
With a declaration of a National Emergency around the coronavirus in the United States, President Donald Trump and the United States now have extra powers and capabilities to enact measures that will...
24/7 Wall St. has tracked more than 35 analyst downgrades in the oil patch on Monday, after a Saudi-Russia price war on top of the coronavirus outbreak knocking demand for oil.
Oil and gas companies are taking the brunt of investor punishment Monday morning, with some stocks trading down 40% from their Friday closing price.
If the wider spread of COVID-19 wasn't bad enough for the public and the markets, now an oil price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia is pouring salt on the wounds.