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Could WTI Slip Below $60 Today?
Don't Go Breaking My Heart, Elton John & Kiki Dee
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Could WTI Slip Below $60 Today?
At $60.66 right now, it's very possible we could get close to $60 this afternoon after API crude oil inventory data is released.
Whoo-hoo!
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The Director's Cut
January, 2018, Data
Link here. NDIC site for calendar and links for past and current Director Cuts here.
The usual disclaimer applies. I do "this" quickly and there will be typographical and factual errors. If this is important to you, go to the source.
Natural gas production: in April, 2017, it was reported that North Dakota produced a record amount of natural gas: in that month, natural gas production jumped 6% to more than 1.8 billion cubic feet / day. What was North Dakota's natural gas production two months ago, January, 20178? It dropped slightly from December, 2017, which was the all-time high to date. Most recent data: 2,068,244 MCF/day vs 2,084,925 MCF/day in December, 2017.
Oil production
- January, 2018: 1,175,638 bopd
- December, 2017: 1,181,319 bopd
- Delta: a decrease of 7,198 bbls / day
- Delta: a decrease of 0.6% (a revision when data presented next month could show an increase)
Producing wells:
- January, 2018: 14,313 (all-time high was 14,338 in December, 2017)
- December, 2017: 14,338
- Delta: a decrease of 25 wells; about a 0.2% decrease (if revised when data comes out next month, then I think we might see another all-time high, as well as an increase in total crude oil production as well as natural gas production)
- February, 2018: 96
- January, 2018: 106
- December, 2017: 86
- November, 2017: 119
- October, 2017: 147
- September, 2017: 104
- August, 2017: 101
- July, 2017: 146 (huge jump)
- Today: $49.25 (it's hard to believe that the all-time high was $136.29 on 7/3/2008)
- February, 2018: $50.98
- January, 2018: $54.75
- December, 2017: $49.56
- November: $49.75
- October: $43.56
- September: $39.56
- August: $37.93
- July: $35.83
- today: 59
- February, 2018: 57
- January, 2018: 56
- December: 52
- November: 54
- October: 56
- September: 56
- August: 56
- July: 58
- June: 55
- waiting on completion: 853, down 24 from the end of December to the end of January
- estimated inactive well count: 1,554, up 85 from the end of December to the end of January
- January, 2018: takeaway capacity including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- November: takeaway capacity including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- October data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- September data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- August data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- July data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- June data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate
- May data: including CBR to coastal refineries is more than adequate (major change in verbiage)
- statewide: 85% (previous -- 87% [trend pretty much flat, disappointing for some])
- FBIR: 81% (previous: 80%)
- goal: 88% through October 31, 2020; then 91%
- comment: October, 2017, was terrible; it's getting better on FBIR
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