Locator: 51036B.
Micron Technology (MU): will report its fiscal third-quarter results for 2026 on Wednesday, June 24, after the market closes. Management has provided preliminary guidance of record revenue around $33.5 billion and adjusted earnings of $19.15 per share, with the company's high-bandwidth memory (HBM) supply for the year completely sold out.
Micron Technology (MU): BofA raises MU price target to $1,500 vs $950. Wow, from $950 to. $1,500 is not trivial.
IBM bucks today's trend: up 4.4% pre-market; much of rest of tech falls significantly.
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Back to the Bakken
WTI: $73.51. Lowest level in past three months. Best gasoline price in local area (north Texas, DFW, $3.04 at local Walmart).
New wells reporting:
- Wednesday, June 24, 2026: 28 for the month, 184 for the quarter, 341 for the year,
- 41607, conf, Hess, BL-Mortenson-156-95-2234H-5,
- Tuesday, June 23, 2026: 27 for the month, 183 for the quarter, 340 for the year,
- 41682, conf, Devon Energy, Johnson 27-34 8H,
RBN Energy: plans to move more Marcellus / Utica gas to the midwest, mid-south, and deep south. Link here. Archived.
Midwestern
states like Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan are important markets
for natural gas producers in the Marcellus/Utica, as are states in the
Mid-South like Kentucky and Tennessee and states in the Deep South. But
expanding gas sales in those markets will require a lot more pipeline
capacity, and that’s exactly what’s in the works. In today’s RBN blog,
we continue our look at the pipeline projects being planned to move more
Appalachia-sourced gas within — and out of — the U.S.’s largest gas
production region.
This is Part 5 of our blog series on gas market dynamics in the Northeast. In Part 1,
we said the Appalachia market has been quietly evolving in ways that
will not only shift flow patterns within the region but also affect
flows to the Southeast, Midwest and Gulf Coast. Part 2
focused on gas demand within the Northeast, which is getting a big
boost from the power-generation sector as coal retirements continue and
data center development proliferates. In Part 3,
we started a review of the pipeline projects planned to enable more gas
to flow through and out of the Marcellus/Utica, focusing on projects in
New England and New York. Part 4
continued that review with a look at projects within Pennsylvania;
regionwide enhancements like TC Energy’s Appalachian Supply Project; and
projects involving or tied to either the Mountain Valley Pipeline or
Williams’s Transco system.
Today, we wrap up the
pipeline projects part of our series with an analysis of (1) projects
that will provide expanded capacity to eastern Ohio and beyond and (2)
projects that are more distant but still related to the Marcellus/Utica.
Expanded capacity to Ohio and beyond
There
already are several major pipelines that transport Appalachian gas
west. These include the bidirectional, Tallgrass Energy-operated Rockies
Express (REX), which can move up to 2.6 Bcf/d westward; Enbridge’s
sprawling Texas Eastern Transmission Co. (TETCO), and TC Energy’s ANR
Pipeline system. (The ANR system is being expanded to support new data
centers and related power projects in the Upper Midwest — more on that
later) and two big greenfield pipelines that started up in 2018: Energy
Transfer and Ares Management’s 3.425-Bcf/d Rover Pipeline and Enbridge’s
1.4-Bcf/d NEXUS Pipeline.
As massive as these
pipelines may be, rising gas demand means that still more westbound
capacity into, through and out of Ohio will be needed over the next few
years. Among the largest development efforts is Boardwalk Pipelines’
two-part Borealis Pipeline Project, which will enable
an incremental 2 Bcf/d to be transported west across Ohio and an
incremental 1.75 Bcf/d to move into southeastern Indiana and northern
and western Kentucky. (Boardwalk is a subsidiary of Loews Corp.)