Updates
Later: I mis-wrote when I typed in "Paul Kruger" below (it has since been corrected). I was thinking of the Hollywood horror stories and Freddie Krueger. It should have been Paul Krugman. My apologies to Freddie Krueger. I was talking about horror stories on Wall Street, not Elm Street.
Original Post
Active rigs:
| 7/27/2016 | 07/27/2015 | 07/27/2014 | 07/27/2012 | 07/27/2011 |
Active Rigs | 35 | 73 | 193 | 207 | 182 |
Back in April/May, 2016, we were
down to 25 active rigs in North Dakota.
RBN Energy:
northeast natural gas vs Gulf Coast production, big update, part 1 of 2. Archived.
Selected BR wells in North Fork oil field have just been updated: still no production data released; seven wells go to DUC status.
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Quickly Through The Headlines -- Lots Of News Today
Hess: reports a $1.29/share loss; expectations, $1.26/share loss; shares down in pre-market trading
NextEra Energy: huge beat; $1.67/share vs $1.16/share (NextEra: wind in ND; Google)
Comcast revenue tops estimates,
WSJ
At
McDonald's: all-day breakfast cools,
WSJ; previously reported from different sources
Coca-Cola beats on earnings, cuts revenue forecast,
CNBC
Deutsche Bank earnings fall 98%. Really? Deutsche Bank turnaround rocked by profit surprise,
Bloomberg
Panera Bread might mark the beginning of the restaurant recession,
The Street
SLB, HAL beat 2!16 forecasts, Zacks
Apple does it again: stock climbs 6% as bet on iPhone SE pays off (this is the "affordable" phone); can't wait to see comments over at
Macrumors
Oil, now under $43, clse to 3-month low as oversupply weighs
Why the
Federal Reserve is rethinking everything
, Washington Post (I assume she wants to keep her job)
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The Market
Early afternoon, new 52-week highs, NYSE: 192, including:
- Baxter (big whoop)
- CAT
- Comcast: not listed yet, but it will come close if it doesn't hit a new high; it looks like it matched it 52-week high;
- Exelon
- Sprint: $6 yesterday; $6.28 today
New lows: 8
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Facebook
"
Facebook reports another mega quarter, crushing revenue." --
Yahoo!Finance. Beat expectations on both earnings and revenue: 97 cents vs 81 cents; and $6.44 billion vs $6 billion.
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MuskMelon Announces That The GigaFactory Is Now Open
Link here.
Tesla Motors has officially open (sic) the doors to its $5 billion Gigafactory near Reno, Nevada.
Although Tesla opened the Gigafactory on Tuesday, only about 14 percent
of the facility has been completed. By this time next year Tesla hopes
to have about a third of the construction done.
I can't make this stuff up.
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McDonald's All-Day Breakfast Cools -- WSJ
Link here.
Mr. Easterbrook said he expected that demand for all-day breakfast
would settle down from its initial boost but that the company expects to
get another lift in the fall, when it makes more breakfast items available all day and that the company will continue to make improvements to its food and operations.
He also cited softening growth in the restaurant industry as a reason for the results.
Consumers have been pulling back as a result of economic uncertainties.
“First
of all, there is a widening gap between food away from home and food at
home...so that’s a small part of it. I think generally there is just a
broader level of uncertainty in consumers’ minds at the moment, both
trying to gauge their financial security going forward,” Mr. Easterbrook
said. “Whether through elections or through local events, people are
slightly mindful of an unsettled world. When people aren’t certain, when
families are uncertain, caution starts to prevail and they start to
hold back on spend.”
No.
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Finally, Now They Tell Us
From TheWashington Post:
The Federal Reserve is being forced to reevaluate its most basic
assumptions about the economy after trillions of dollars of stimulus and
years of ultralow interest rates have failed to generate a more robust
recovery.
Trillions of dollars of stimulus ... failed to generate a more robust economy.
Paul Krugman: put that in your pipe and smoke it. Of course he will tell us not enough trillions were spent on stimulus.
Personally, and I'm taking my "MDW" hat off and talking personally, now, not to run afoul of some law: I think the amount of stimulus was not the problem. Where the money was spent was the problem. One can start with the 28 failed solar companies jump-started with federal money, or whatever it was.
Crony capitalism.
More from the linked article, linked, not leaked:
Seven years after the recession officially ended, many of the headwinds
have indeed dissipated — yet normal remains elusive. In its place is a
gnawing fear that the economy has permanently downshifted into an era of
weak growth that policymakers have little power to reverse. Fed
officials have all but given up hope of the 3 percent rate of expansion
once considered the baseline for a healthy economy. Instead, they are
coming to grips with the possibility that lackluster growth is the best
this recovery can offer.
And one hopes it doesn't crash:
The Fed’s most recent economic projections show
growth leveling off this year at 2 percent and remaining there for the
foreseeable future. That, in turn, has pushed down the central bank’s
estimates of how high it will raise interest rates and how quickly it
will do so. Speaking to reporters last month, Fed Chair Janet L. Yellen acknowledged that slow growth and low interest rates might be the United States' “new normal.”
“The
Fed is coming to realize that the U.S. economy is a plane that is
flying more slowly and closer to the ground, and it has to reset its
expectations for what it can deliver,” said Vincent Reinhart, chief
economist for Standish Mellon Asset Management and formerly a senior
official at the central bank.
Me? I couldn't be more optimistic. Maybe we need some "leveling" to prepare us for the next leg up.
The Fed, by the way,
saying things have really improved, but then said they would not raise rates. Janet does not want to be blamed for a recession. What does
GDPNow say as of July 27?
The GDPNow model forecast for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2016 is 2.3 percent on July 27, down from 2.4 percent on July 19. After this morning's
advance durable manufacturing report from the U.S. Census Bureau, the
forecast for second-quarter real equipment investment growth declined
from –1.2 percent to –1.9 percent and the forecast of the contribution
of inventory investment to real GDP growth declined from –0.57
percentage points to –0.63 percentage points.
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Desperation
You know things are getting desperate when
both the
New York Times and
The Los Angeles Times publish a Donald Trump joke as a headline story. On a more serious note, the editors are more concerned about a joke than the loss of 30,000 Hillary Clinton e-mails. I call that a "blind spot." Actually it's worse: it's really poor reporting; really poor analysis; really lop-sided favoritism.
Later:
The Wall Street Journal has now reported the same story the same way.