New York Mercantile Exchange › NEW YORK HARBOR ULSD Feb 2013/Sep 2014 Spread (NYMEX:HO.G13_U14.E)
0.1704 -0.0013 (-0.76%)
2013-01-30 17:42:48, 30 min delay
| Last Price | 0.1704 |
|---|---|
| Open | 0.1704 |
| High | 0.1704 |
| Time | 2013-01-30 17:42:48 |
| Contract High Date | 2012-09-14 |
| Contract Low Date | 2012-04-30 |
| Close Time | 17:15 |
| Settle Time | 17:42 |
|---|---|
| Previous Close | 0.1704 |
| Low | 0.1704 |
| Contract High | 0.2401 |
| Contract Low | -0.0863 |
| Open Time | 18:00 |
Today's Top 50 Trending Stocks: Let our SmartScan and Trade Triangle technology, brought to you courtesy of our premium service MarketClub, instantly rank today's top 50 stocks for you. This complimentary list will update throughout the day to highlight the most timely trading opportunities.
Trader's Blog
Fundamentals Can Kill You If You're Not Careful!
3 hours ago
In Precious Metals, Cash Flow Is King
4 hours ago
Trade of the Week Review
11 hours ago
Today's Video Update: What Goes Up, Must Come Down...Right?
1 day ago
Today's News
AP Top Financial News At 5:12 p.m. EDT
1 hour, 53 minutes ago
NSA director says plot against Wall Street foiled Chrysler agrees to recall of Jeeps at risk of fire Aetna to stop selling individual plans in Calif.
AP Top Extended Financial Headlines At 5:12 p.m. EDT
1 hour, 53 minutes ago
NSA director defends sweeping surveillance program, says plot against Wall Street thwarted Aetna will stop selling individual health plans in Calif.; was a small player in that field
Chrysler agrees to recall of Jeeps at risk of fire
1 hour, 53 minutes ago
Chrysler abruptly agreed to recall 2.7 million older model Jeeps Tuesday, reversing a defiant stance and avoiding a possible public relations nightmare over fuel tanks that can rupture and cause fires in rear-end collisions. The company said calls from customers concerned about the safety of their Jeeps played a part in its going along with the government's request.
Study finds housing bias against same-sex couples
1 hour, 57 minutes ago
Same-sex couples are treated less favorably than heterosexual couples when seeking information about rental housing advertised over the Internet, according to a first-of-its-kind national study from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said the findings show a need "to continue our efforts to ensure that everyone is treated the same when it comes to finding a home to call their own, regardless of their sexual orientation."
