Banks oil field has been updated; look at the number of wells still NOT on a pump; look at the cumulative production of these very young wells. (Click on the link in blue; when you get to the link, be sure to scroll to the very bottom and work your way up to see the cumulative production of the wells; all wells have been updated. Also note that every operator in the Bakken wants part of this action.)
Truax oil field has also been updated but wells that were previously updated through 4/13 were not updated - if that makes sense.
Bull Butte oil field was also updated but there really wasn't much to update; it's been quiet up there. But it was one of the early fields in the Williston area and has always held a special interest for me.
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Update on Enbridge's Sandpiper pipeline at Duluth News Tribune:
Janaki Fisher-Merritt said he was surprised in recent weeks to get
letters from Enbridge Energy asking to survey his family’s Carlton
County farm for a possible new oil pipeline route.
Fisher-Merritt
had heard about Enbridge plans to expand existing pipelines across the
Northland to carry more Canadian and North Dakota oil east and south.
But he assumed the new oil would flow along the existing pipeline route
and not across the woods on his land.
“This was out of the blue.
We’re a couple miles from any other pipeline, and we hadn’t heard they
were looking for new routes,” he said, echoing several of his
Wrenshall-area neighbors.
I
track pipelines of interest here.
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Wells coming off confidential list have been posted. Zavanna with a huge well in Williston oil field. But only four wells reported an IP: 7 of the 11 wells coming off confidential list went to DRL status.
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site.
Samson Oil & Gas requests trading halt due to capital raise : Co announces that, per its request, an immediate Trading Halt of
its Ordinary Shares has been issued by the Australian Securities
Exchange commencing Monday August 19 2013 until Wednesday August 21 2013
pending the announcement to the market of a capital raising.
Also: Chesapeake Energy: Icahn disclosed 9.98% active stake (66.45 mln
shares) in an amended 13D filing out Friday after the close; up from
~59.7 mln shares as of 6/30.
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Active rigs: 183
RBN Energy:
a great analysis of crude price as related to the turnaround in Cushing inventories. For nnewbies (and me) a great explanation of backwardization and cotango, any why oil companies are selling their crude now. A look at the future of crude oil pricing in the out years.
Folks might want to take a look at the WTI NYMEX forward curve at the linked article. Not necessarily a pretty picture. The chart tells you all you need to know why oil companies are selling their crude now (backwardization), which is the opposite of what one would see is experiencing cotango.
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WSJ Links
Very little of interest today. Front section: US and Egypt on collision course. As the reverend has said, the chickens have come home to roost. Saudi king, by the way, backs the Egyptian military. Tectonic changes in the Mideast.
Biden will run for presidency; putting together PAC. Of course, that's not official.
I can't remember if I posted my little story about helium in short supply. The "balloon man" in Belmont (Massachusetts) confirmed that when I asked about helium supplies. Now a story that "unless lawmakers act to wind it down more gradually, the Federal Helium
Reserve, which supplies more than one-third of the world's crude helium,
will shut down.
"
Hospitals require substantial amounts of helium to cool their MRI machines.
O'BamaCare
I
track O'BamaCare here. Today, there were three big developments:
August 19, 2013: for those do not know, "Forever 21" is the trendiest young women's store right now. The chain has just announced
it will no longer have any full-time non-management employees.
The predictions and fears of the Affordable Care Act’s adversaries
have begun to materialize, specifically fears that the law will
encourage employers to demote their employees to part-time positions in
order to evade federal health care requirements. Popular clothing
company Forever 21
is the first of what might be many companies to limit its
non-management workers’ hours to 29.5 a week, just below the 30-hour
minimum that the ACA deems full-time work.
Explaining that the company “recently audited its staffing levels,
staffing needs, and payroll in conjunction with reviewing its overall
operating budget,” Associate Director of Human Resources Carla Macias informed employees that effective August 31, they will no longer be full-time employees of Forever 21.
August 19, 2013:
O'BamaCare will be completely unraveled by Labor Day --
Chicago Tribune. But it's perfectly legal to flout the law. I guess.
August 19, 2013: the president has essentially blown off O'BamaCare: waiving, delaying; and now it's reported that
the White House has missed more than 50% of the law's deadlines.
I don't know if this is how all presidents have worked, but it is clear
that this president broke the code -- Presidents can do what they want;
they won't be impeached for failing to uphold laws that the public
doesn't like.
[A digression: other than for political reasons and crony capitalism, does anyone remember why "we" even went down this road to national "O'bama" healthcare? Yes, it had something to do with 10 to 30 million folks who did not have health insurance. The number was always a WAG -- a wild ass guess. No one knew, but most of the uninsured fell into one of three categories: a) young, healthy, who elected not to carry health insurance; b) unemployed, in between jobs and would get health care when employed; and, c) undocumented (used to be called "illegal") aliens. So, now, it appears we have a train wreck involving 360 million previously insured people on a track that was built for those 10 to 30 imaginary health careless victims. "If it ain't broken, break it," taken to extremes. The biggest catalyst: Hillary.]
EVs
I track EV's here. Interesting story today at CNBC.
Goes along with what I posted a few weeks ago: Tesla is going to make a lot of money; Tesla broke the code on who to target.
August 19, 2013: the young and the rich buying the Tesla Model S. I think this kills the Chevy Volt. In fact, at the very end of the article:
"If you can afford a $100,000 dollar car why would you buy the Chevy
Volt? It is a nice car, but why wouldn't you buy the Tesla Model S? If
you have the money, you are going to buy the Tesla model S," said
Riswick.
And that's why there were no changes to the 2014 model. Everyone working on the Chevy Volt over at GM were moved to the Cadillac division which, with the 2013 model, now has "
the world's only full-size luxury SUV." Interesting, huh? A page from the 70's Japanese playbook. Get the technology right on the small vehicles, and then move into the large, luxury car market.
The Market
CNBC is reporting:
Outflows from U.S. bond mutual funds and exchange traded funds has
accelerated in August, ...
So far
this month, U.S. bond mutual funds and ETFs have seen outflows of $19.7
billion, more than the $14.8 billion of outflows in July. August's
outflow is already the fourth-highest on record ...
The sell-off in bonds pushed yields on the U.S. 10-year to 2.8656 percent on Monday morning, the highest since July 2011.
Gee, I wonder where that money will go?
Let's Put This Into Perspective
From the AP:
The streets of Egypt's capital have become a deadly battleground
between Morsi's supporters and backers of the military that overthrew
him. The crisis has severed friendships and, in some cases, turned
neighbor against neighbor in the city of more than 18 million people.
More than 450 people have been killed in Cairo over the past four
days, just over half the country's nationwide death toll during the week
of violence. Hundreds of those victims died when Egyptian security
forces attacked two pro-Morsi sit-ins in Cairo on Wednesday.
Neighbor against neighbor? During the US Civil War, folks, it was brother against brother. And the cost in lives? In the story above: more than 450 people have been killed in a city of 18 million over the past four days. From wiki, Antietam:
It is the bloodiest single-day battle in American history, with 22,717 dead, wounded, and missing on both sides combined.
And then there's Gettysburg, again from wiki:
The battle involved the largest number of casualties of the entire war and is often described as the war's turning point. Between 46,000 and 51,000 soldiers from both armies were casualties in the three-day battle.
And, then of course, there was King Philip's War, also from wiki:
The war was the single greatest calamity to occur in seventeenth-century
Puritan New England. In the space of little more than a year, twelve of
the region's towns were destroyed and many more damaged, the colony's
economy was all but ruined, and much of its population was killed,
including one-tenth of all men available for military service. More than half of New England's towns were attacked by Native American warriors.
September 11, 2001: almost 3,000 preventable deaths.
I won't even discuss the Turkish-Armenian genocide. Or the Holocaust.
Population of Chicago: 3 million. Annual homicides: 500.