HAL

Halliburton Co Price

HAL
$40.44
+$0.44(+1.10%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 19:02 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 19:02, Halliburton Co (HAL) is priced at $40.44, with a total market cap of $33.27B, a P/E ratio of 18.48, and a dividend yield of 1.70%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $39.69 and $40.52. The current price is 1.88% above the day's low and 0.19% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 6.51M. Over the past 52 weeks, HAL has traded between $36.92 to $42.46, and the current price is -4.75% away from the 52-week high.

HAL Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$39.12
Market Cap$33.27B
Volume6.51M
P/E Ratio18.48
Dividend Yield (TTM)1.70%
Dividend Amount$0.17
Diluted EPS (TTM)1.83
Net Income (FY)$1.28B
Revenue (FY)$22.18B
Earnings Date2026-07-28
EPS Estimate0.53
Revenue Estimate$5.46B
Shares Outstanding850.55M
Beta (1Y)0.742
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-04
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-25

About HAL

Halliburton Company provides products and services to the energy industry worldwide. It operates in two segments, Completion and Production, and Drilling and Evaluation. The Completion and Production segment offers production enhancement services that include stimulation and sand control services; cementing services, such as well bonding and casing, and casing equipment; completion tools that offer downhole solutions and services, including well completion products and services, intelligent well completions, and service tools, as well as liner hanger, sand control, and multilateral systems; production solutions comprising coiled tubing, hydraulic workover units, downhole tools, and pumping and nitrogen services; and pipeline and process services, such as pre-commissioning, commissioning, maintenance, and decommissioning. This segment also provides electrical submersible pumps, as well as artificial lift services. The Drilling and Evaluation segment offers drilling fluid systems, performance additives, completion fluids, solids control, specialized testing equipment, and waste management services; oilfield completion, production, and downstream water and process treatment chemicals and services; drilling systems and services; wireline and perforating services consists of open-hole logging, and cased-hole and slickline; and drill bits and services comprising roller cone rock bits, fixed cutter bits, hole enlargement, and related downhole tools and services, as well as coring equipment and services. This segment also provides cloud based digital services and artificial intelligence solutions on an open architecture for subsurface insights, integrated well construction, and reservoir and production management; testing and subsea services, such as acquisition and analysis of reservoir information and optimization solutions; and project management and integrated asset management services. Halliburton Company was founded in 1919 and is based in Houston, Texas.
SectorEnergy
IndustryOil & Gas Equipment & Services
CEOJeffrey Allen Miller
HeadquartersHouston,TX,US
Employees (FY)46.00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$482.26K
Net Income per Employee$27.89K

Halliburton Co (HAL) FAQ

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Halliburton Co (HAL) is currently trading at $40.44, with a 24h change of +1.10%. The 52-week trading range is $36.92–$42.46.

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Hot Posts About Halliburton Co (HAL)

UnluckyMiner

UnluckyMiner

2 hours ago
Just stumbled upon something that's been bugging me for years - the whole mystery around who actually created Bitcoin. Like, we all use it, we all know about it, but the founder? Still a complete enigma. Thought I'd dig into this rabbit hole and share what I found. So here's the thing - back in 2008 when the financial system was literally collapsing, someone (or maybe a team?) under the name Satoshi Nakamoto dropped this whitepaper called "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System." It was genius, honestly. They solved problems that had been plaguing digital currency attempts for decades - the double-spending issue, the Byzantine Generals problem, all that. But then, around 2010-2011, they just... vanished. Ghosted the entire community. The crazy part? Satoshi apparently mined about 1 million Bitcoin in those early days. That's roughly 4.76% of the entire supply. And these coins have literally never moved. Ever. It's like they're locked in a vault somewhere, and honestly, that alone makes the whole mystery even wilder. Now, the community has spent over a decade trying to figure out who this person actually is. And I mean, there are some seriously credible candidates. Hal Finney was the first person to run Bitcoin after Satoshi and received the first transaction - 10 BTC. Guy was a cryptography legend, involved with PGP, the whole cypherpunk movement. Some people think he might have been Satoshi himself, though he always denied it. Then there's Nick Szabo, who proposed something called "bit gold" years before Bitcoin even existed. The similarities are... uncanny. Like, Bitcoin feels like someone took Szabo's concept and actually built it. Adam Back created Hashcash, which is basically the proof-of-work mechanism Bitcoin uses. Wei Dai designed B-money, another decentralized currency concept that never quite took off. Both of these guys had all the technical chops to pull off Bitcoin. Then you've got some wilder theories - Dorian Nakamoto (who shares the name) got outed by Newsweek in 2014 and it was a whole thing. Turns out he had nothing to do with it, but the incident showed how desperate people are to solve this puzzle. What gets me is the anonymity choice itself. Like, why would you create something this revolutionary and then just disappear? The decentralization philosophy makes sense - Satoshi probably didn't want Bitcoin tied to a single person. No founder worship, no single point of failure. That's actually pretty genius from a design perspective. But it also means we might never know for sure. The linguistic analysis is wild too. People have studied the whitepaper and Satoshi's forum posts, looking for clues. British English spelling, specific word choices, the coding style - all of it points to someone with serious cryptography knowledge, likely from an English-speaking country, probably with academic background. But honestly, that could describe dozens of people in the cypherpunk community. What I find most interesting is how Bitcoin actually proved the concept works without a known founder. After Satoshi left, developers like Gavin Andresen took over, but they didn't centralize it. The community kept it decentralized through BIPs (Bitcoin Improvement Proposals), community consensus, the whole thing. It's like Satoshi's disappearance was the ultimate test - and Bitcoin passed. The network kept running, kept evolving, without needing a central authority or a famous founder. So who is Satoshi Nakamoto? Could be Hal Finney, could be Nick Szabo, could be Adam Back, could be someone we've never even heard of. Could be multiple people working together under one name. The truth is, we might never know. And maybe that's the point. Bitcoin's whole thing is that it doesn't need to depend on anyone's identity or reputation. It just works. But damn, the mystery is addictive. Every time someone claims to be Satoshi (looking at you, Craig Wright), the whole community goes into overdrive analyzing evidence. It's become this ongoing treasure hunt that's probably never going to end. And honestly? That's kind of fitting for a currency that's all about decentralization and mystery.
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MidnightSeller

MidnightSeller

6 hours ago
I have always found the story of Bitcoin pioneers fascinating, especially when I read Hal Finney's direct words. This guy was truly one of the few who really understood what was happening in the very early days of the network. Looking back, Hal Finney was already on the blockchain when practically no one knew what it was. He was the second node on the network, right after Satoshi. Think about it: while people debated whether Bitcoin would ever have value, he was there testing the code, understanding the mechanism, believing in the project. What strikes me when reading his communications is his clarity. Hal Finney wasn't someone shouting from the rooftops about making easy money. He talked about cryptography, technical problems, how technology could actually work. He had a clear and pragmatic vision. Now, before continuing: I want to be transparent about what you’re reading. CoinDesk is a publication that covers the cryptocurrency sector with serious journalistic standards. Their editors follow strict editorial lines to ensure what you read is reliable and impartial. It’s part of Bullish, a digital asset platform for institutions, so there are financial ties behind the scenes — it’s good to know. But returning to Hal Finney: what stays with me is how one of Bitcoin’s technical founders was also a humble person, who understood limits and risks. He wasn’t someone promising worlds and wonders. He was someone who built, tested, and shared what he learned. That’s why his words still carry weight today when you talk about Bitcoin with someone who knows what they’re talking about.
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