(Bloomberg) -- More than two dozen of Exxon Mobil Corp.’s trading staff declined the oil giant’s offer to transfer to London from Belgium, putting their jobs at risk, according to a union official.Most Read from BloombergCDK Hackers Want Millions in Ransom to End Car Dealership OutageAt Blackstone’s $339 Billion Property Arm, the Honeymoon Is OverApple Won’t Roll Out AI Tech In EU Market Over Regulatory ConcernsWall Street’s Smart-Trade Brigade Thrashed Again on Stock BoomA majority of the trade
(Bloomberg) -- A California bill forcing the two largest US pension funds to divest an estimated $15 billion in oil and gas assets has quietly fizzled for the third straight year, but the influential state lawmaker behind the effort vowed to renew the legislation with a stronger alliance of climate activists. Most Read from BloombergCDK Hackers Want Millions in Ransom to End Car Dealership OutageAt Blackstone’s $339 Billion Property Arm, the Honeymoon Is OverApple Won’t Roll Out AI Tech In EU Ma
The CEO slashed costs and spent money when others were skeptical. Now, Exxon is brimming with low-cost oil.