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Freehold Royalties Ltd T.FRU

Alternate Symbol(s):  FRHLF

Freehold Royalties Ltd. is a Canada-based royalty company. It manages non-government portfolios of oil and natural gas royalties in Canada with a sizeable land base in the United States. Its segments include Canada and the United States. Canada segment includes exploration and evaluation assets and the petroleum and natural gas interests in Western Canada. The United States segment includes petroleum and natural gas interests primarily held in the Permian (Midland and Delaware), Eagle Ford, Haynesville and Bakken basins largely located in the states of Texas, Louisiana, North Dakota and New Mexico. Its total land holdings encompass approximately 6.1 million gross acres in Canada and approximately 1.1 million gross drilling acres in the United States. The Company also have gross overriding royalty (GORR) and other interests in approximately five million acres. It has royalty interests in close to 21,000 producing wells and almost 500 units spanning five provinces and eight states.


TSX:FRU - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Dec 14, 2023 7:19am
128 Views
Post# 35783870

Crude This Morning

Crude This Morning

Commodities

Crude prices were up, buoyed by a dovish Fed, a softer U.S. dollar and a bigger-than-expected decline in weekly U.S. inventories.

The day range on Brent was US$74.44 to US$75.70 in the early premarket period. The range on West Texas Intermediate was US$69.54 to US$70.79. Both benchmarks were up nearly 2 per cent in the predawn period.

“The prospect of deep rate cuts from central banks next year has boosted the global economic prospects and in turn the price of oil,” OANDA’s Craig Erlam said in an early note.

“The question now is whether central banks are responding just in time or whether it will prove to be just too late. Oil prices over the coming weeks may offer some insight into market expectations on that.

Sentiment drew support from figures released Wednesday by the U.S. Energy Information Administration showing a bigger-than-expected 4.3 million barrel decline in stockpiles last week. Similarly, prices benefitted from a lower U.S. dollar following indications of future Fed rate cuts. A weaker dollar makes crude less expensive for holders of other currencies.

Meanwhile, the International Energy Agency raised its demand forecast for next year early Thursday morning. World consumption will rise by 1.1 million barrels per day in 2024, the Paris-based IEA said in a monthly report, up 130,000 bpd from its previous forecast, Reuters reported.

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