Paramount President Jeff Shell to Depart
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Shell’s profitability push is delivering strong FCF and shareholder returns, yet it trades at a discount vs Exxon and Chevron amid Iran conflict—read now.
It turns out that Jeff Shell isn’t walking away from Paramount empty-handed. The studio’s ex-president, who exited on Wednesday amid a headline-grabbing legal drama with
Shell said on Wednesday that weaker first-quarter ‌gas output and a hit to short-term liquidity would be offset partly by stronger oil trading, offering an early glimpse into how the U.S.-Israeli war on Iranis reshaping oil majors' earnings.
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Jeff Shell leaves Paramount after allegations of SEC violations; company calls claims 'baseless'
Paramount President Jeff Shell is leaving his position after a lawsuit accused him of violating SEC rules.
The company syndicated $49 billion in debt across 18 banks, in a major move toward the closing of the Warners deal.
Jeff Shell is unlikely to be directly replaced as president of Paramount, numerous insiders and people who do business with the company tell Deadline. Despite weeks of speculation about Shell’s
Energy producer Shell plans to begin natural gas output in 2027 from the ​Loran-Manatee offshore field, which crosses the border of Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago the chairman of Trinidad's National Gas Company,
Integrated oil majors Exxon Mobil and Shell each revealed how the Iran war hurt production in the first quarter.
Jeff Shell is out as president of Paramount Skydance less than a year into the job, marking a stunning second downfall for the embattled media executive amid a bombshell lawsuit accusing him of leaking corporate secrets.
Shell (NYSE:SHEL) is slowly but steadily moving ahead on a major gas project and it's starting to look more real now. The company is targeting first production from the Loran Manatee field, which sits between Venezuela and Trinidad,