Explore the full directors' dealings record of US Energy CORP, a listed equity based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the oversight of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Energy sector, US Energy CORP has recorded 36 public disclosures. Market capitalisation: €31.8m. The latest transaction was reported on 1 May 2026 — J. Among the most active insiders: Keys Randall D. All data is free.
25 of 36 declarations
U.S. Energy Corp. (NASDAQ: USEG) is a U.S.-listed small-cap energy company traded on the Nasdaq Capital Market in the United States. The company was originally incorporated in Wyoming in 1966 and later reincorporated in Delaware in August 2022. Over time, it has evolved from a more traditional oil and natural gas exploration-and-production business into a broader industrial gas, carbon-management, and helium-development story. Its principal executive office is in Houston, Texas, placing it in the center of the U.S. energy industry. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000101594/000143774926008057/useg20251231_10k.htm)) Today, the business is best understood as a transitional platform. U.S. Energy still retains oil and gas assets across the Rockies, Mid-Continent, and Gulf Coast regions, with operational exposure in Montana, Wyoming, Oklahoma, and Texas. However, management has been redeploying capital away from legacy hydrocarbon properties and toward the Kevin Dome industrial gas project in Montana. The company has disclosed acreage acquisitions in Toole County, drilling and completion of new industrial gas wells in 2025, and ongoing work on processing, gathering, transport, power infrastructure, and regulatory approvals for future injection or disposal rights. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000101594/000143774926008057/useg20251231_10k.htm)) From a competitive standpoint, USEG remains a highly speculative micro-cap with material exposure to commodity prices, financing risk, permitting risk, and execution risk. That said, its strategic pivot gives it a more differentiated profile than a standard domestic oil and gas producer. The company is trying to build value around a relatively scarce industrial gas niche, especially helium, while also developing a carbon-management angle that could be supported by regulatory incentives and commercial offtake agreements. Recent public disclosures point to a five-year helium sales agreement with an industrial gas counterparty, an expanded senior secured debt facility, and a final investment decision to build the Big Sky Carbon Hub in Montana. ([nasdaq.com](https://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/us-energy-corp-closes-expanded-senior-secured-debt-facility-completing-phase-1?utm_source=openai)) For investors, the equity case is therefore less about stable upstream cash generation and more about project optionality. The company has been monetizing legacy assets, strengthening its balance sheet, and advancing Big Sky toward first commercial operations. In practical terms, USEG should be viewed as an energy transition-style small-cap with upside linked to permitting, construction milestones, offtake execution, and successful commercialization of helium and CO2-related streams, rather than as a mature conventional E&P name. ([nasdaq.com](https://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/us-energy-corp-reports-2025-results-and-highlights-transformation-integrated?utm_source=openai))