Updates
June 28, 2014: in the original post, it is noted that wind farms in California have a license to kill up to 5 eagles/year; the feds allow 15 eagles/year. But no slack is given to individual white men taking eagles on a reservation.
The Bismarck Tribune is reporting:
A federal judge has ordered a North Dakota man to pay $6,000 in
restitution and fines for illegally trapping an eagle on the Standing
Rock Indian Reservation.
Investigators say Tyrell Bateman was
attempting to snare coyotes on land where he wasn’t authorized to hunt.
The eagle was caught in one of the traps northeast of Selfridge on Jan.
5. A witness took photos of the bird before releasing it.
If I read that correctly, the eagle capture was unintended, and it was released, apparently well enough to fly off. He should have pulled an "Elizabeth Warren," saying he was a Native American.
Original Post
How's that war on coal going?
The EIA is reporting:
Japan's use of fossil-fueled generation—the combined amount of
electricity generated from natural gas, oil, and coal—was up 21% in
2012, compared to the level in 2011 after the Tohoku earthquake and
related tsunami that led to the destruction of Tokyo Electric Power
Company's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant and subsequent
outages at other plants.
Following the accident at Fukushima,
all reactors in Japan were required to perform computer-simulated
stress tests to confirm their continued ability to operate safely in
the event of a natural disaster. As reactors shut down for regularly
scheduled maintenance or refueling, stress tests were performed and
submitted to the Japanese Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency
for review and acceptance.
On May 5, 2012, the last of Japan's 54
nuclear generating reactors was shut down for scheduled maintenance and
stress tests. Only two reactors, Ohi Units 3 and 4, have restarted
since the accident, and they are scheduled for an outage later this
year.
Speaking of the war on coal, it looks Minnesotans can start getting ready to pay more for electricity: the EPA will do a "do-ever." It will re-assess two 1970s-vintage coal-burning plants to see if they are contributing to haze over two national parks somewhere in the vicinity.
The StarTribune is reporting:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has
agreed to reassess whether coal burned at Minnesota’s largest power
plant is reducing visibility at national parks in Minnesota and
Michigan.
If the environmental agency decides that emissions from Xcel Energy’s
Sherco power plant in Becker, Minn., cause haze, it could mean costly
pollution control upgrades or early retirement of two 1970s-era
coal-burning units there.
But I think Minnesotans are well-off in the big scheme of things -- certainly they don't have the Guatamalan problem the Texans have -- and this shouldn't be much of a hardship.
Trading at 52-week highs: EPD, NBR, NOV, OKS, PSXP, SLB.
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment decisions based on what you read here or what you think you may have read here.
The morning started out a little "concerning," should we say with the triple whammy (the RBN Energy story, ChevronTexaco profit-taking, and then the market falling in general along with the price of crude oil) but after coming back home from the local sports restaurant after watching the Germany-USA soccer match, all seems fine with the world. The market is recovering a bit, and the US advances to the next round where everything starts over. We are in the soccer equivalent of the "sweet 16" where it's now single elimination, win or go home. I didn't realize this until during the noon hour: the Ukraine-Russia ceasefire, no doubt, was timed so adversaries could watch the World Cup. The governor of the state of New York gave state employees an extended lunch break today.
Nothing like SLB hitting a new high -- and doing it with an "exclamation point" -- to put me in a good mood. And it may not be over.
Barron's suggests SLB might have a 70% upside:
Schlumberger guided earnings
to grow at a 17-20% [compound annual growth rate] to $9-10/sh by 2017,
ahead of our current estimate of a 15% [compound annual growth rate].
However, the company’s estimates are based on just a 6% industry
spending growth level, which is about in line with our long-term
expectations of 4-6%.
Schlumberger has historically converted 30% of its EBITDA or 75% of
[earnings per share] into free cash flow, meaningfully above that of its
peers, while trading at a free cash flow yield of 2-4%.
Currently
shares are trading at the high-end of the range making valuation
compelling. Applying a conservative 3.5% yield to the company’s 2017 EPS
estimate of $9-10/sh, its 75% free cash flow conversion and discounting
it back 2 years at 10%, we arrive at our new $168 price target. If Schlumberger
is able to bring this growth 6-12 months forward and its free cash flow
yield approaches its historical 3% average, we arrive at our $200 bull
case.
RW Baird has also SLB's price target from $117 to $130.
Annual limit on eagles in California now set at five/year.
The AP is reporting:
Agency Director Daniel Ashe said the permit encourages development of
renewable energy while requiring the wind company to take steps to
protect eagles from turbines and power lines. The move will help
California reach its goal of producing one-third of its energy from
renewable sources by 2020, he said.
Or, alternatively, "the permit encourages the killing of eagles while promoting a energy source with no redeemable qualities." Whatever. As long as SLB doubles over the next year, President Obama can do whatever he wants with his eagles. After all, it's his base that promoted all this. I don't have a dog (or an eagle, for that matter) in this fight.
Motley Fool has
an article on EPD's plan to build a "Bakken-to-Cushing" pipeline but it's pretty much an advertisement for their newsletter. This is all it says about the question whether EPD will succeed:
It won't be easy, as most oil and gas producers in the region are more
interested moving oil to the East and West coasts than to the storage
hub in Cushing. However, there are a couple things working in
Enterprise's' favor this time. Tune into the video below to find out why
Enterprise may have a leg up on ONEOK and Energy Transfer Partners this
time, as well as the challenges Enterprise will face in this endeavor.
I can't remember posting my thoughts on the "dividend play," but someone else has noticed the same thing.
The Daily Ticker is reporting:
As businesses, Ford Motor Corp., Intel Corp. and Pepsico
are about as similar as pickup trucks, memory chips and Funyuns. But in
the stock market, these disparate companies are treated as nearly
interchangeable — like savings accounts at different banks —
based solely on how much cash one share of their stock kicks off in a
year. They are just a few of the many motley members of the 3% Club.
There
is now an extraordinary crowding of big U.S. stocks around the 3%
dividend yield level, a threshold that seems to exert a gravitational
pull as investors bereft of easy sources of income bid up equities until
they yield just a bit more than the 10-year Treasury note. (A stock's
yield, calculated as the annual dividend payment divided by price, falls
as shares climb.)
But
too many investors may implicitly be betting that these bond-like
stocks will act like stocks in a low-rate bull market, and like bonds in
an equity downturn. It won’t likely work out that way. If
the stock market remains strong, these are unlikely to be the areas
that continue to thrive. If it hits the skids, such stocks will not
offer much of a buffer.
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Trainwreck
I posted/linked the original
WSJ article earlier, but it never hurts to get a second opinion when it comes to medicine.
Bloomberg's View suggests that ObamaCare's prognosis is getting dimmer:
A nightmare for Affordable Care Act supporters has been the
possibility that only the sick would be left to purchase insurance
through its exchanges, driving premiums up and insurers out. While the
law’s boosters have been quick to dismiss the possibility that such a
so-called death spiral could occur, data published in the Wall Street
Journal suggest that this chain of events may not be so far-fetched after all.
The
findings are significant not just for what they say about how Obamacare
is working now, but also for their impact on the political debate over
its future.
At its base, the data show that people insured through
the law’s exchanges have higher rates of serious medical conditions. Of
the enrollees who have seen a doctor or other health-care provider in
the first quarter of this year, 27 percent have significant medical
problems, including diabetes, cancer, heart trouble and psychiatric
conditions. That rate is substantially higher than that for patients in
nonexchange market plans over the same period. And it’s more than double
the rate of those who were able to hold onto their existing individual
market insurance plans after President Barack Obama was forced to allow
them to keep them.
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A Note to the Granddaughters
This is a sad story: I see that
Ms Abigail Jones Feder, JP Morgan's fixed income security executive has passed away at 51 years old, no doubt at the top of her game. I didn't know this Abigail but I knew another Abigail, a woman who at one time was the love of my life. I met her when we were both well past high school. We had come from very different backgrounds: she, East Coast, urban and urbane, intense; me, Midwest, rural and rustic, naive. She, died, also, at the top of her game at age 57, after a fairly long illness, some years ago. Life, for many, is way too short. Only the good die young.