Wow, what a day, what a week, what a first 21 days!
Betsy DeVos: First, the answer to the question posed earlier today: New Orleans school test scores. When I look at the picture, seriously look at the photograph that accompanies that story, my heart goes out to each and every one of them. They have been through hell and back, and I hope they all succeed beyond all expectations, no matter what they do in life. Our older daughter graduated from a public school in lower Alabama, not all that far different culturally from New Orleans. I think it was a lot more difficult for her than she let on. It is one of the few chapters in her life that she does not want to discuss with me.
Paid protesters: I've had some fun with postings about how DAPL protesters were paid for their activity on Standing Rock Reservation. Sometime ago, a reader sent me the link to this article. For whatever reason I did not post it then, but now it seems entirely appropriate. From The Washington Times, a couple of weeks ago, the state of North Dakota is reminding "paid protesters" that they need to file North Dakota income taxes for 2016.
Tax Commissioner Ryan Rauschenberger
said his office is keeping an eye out for tax forms from environmental
groups that may have hired protesters to agitate against the 1,172-mile,
four-state pipeline project.
“It’s something we’re looking at. I
can tell you I’ve had a number of conversations with legislators
regarding this very issue,” said Mr. Rauschenberger. “[We’re] looking at the entities that have potential paid contractors here on their behalf doing work.”
It’s no secret that millions have been funneled into the six-month-old
demonstration via crowdfunding websites, and that more than 30
environmental organizations, including the Sierra Club, Indigenous
Environmental Network, Food and Water Watch, 350.org and Greenpeace,
have backed the protest.
If national environmental organizations are paying protest personnel, they’re not saying so publicly. Still, Mr. Rauschenberger
said red flags will be raised if he doesn’t start seeing W2 or 1099 tax
forms from those affiliated with the protest arriving at his office.
Tesla, Model S: There must be a gazillion automobiles and light trucks on the roads in north Texas -- Dallas, Ft Worth, Plano, Grapevine, but apparently just one Tesla. Or at least it was just serendipity that I ended up behind the same Tesla at a "red light" in Grapevine near Tutor Time on Pool Road where Sophia goes to school that I saw on Texas Highway 114-west on the north side of South Lake about six months ago. Same Texas license plate: T CLEAN. Now, that I think of it, I wonder if that particular Tesla might not be a dealer's model? The license plate had the "feeling" of being a dealer's plate.
By the way, for those wondering, the Tesla did not impress Sophia. She was looking at the huge black, intimidating F-350 that pulled up alongside the Tesla. From the rear, the Tesla looked like a sporty Honda crossed with a Porsche. A dime a dozen in Southlake.
That Don't Impress Me Much, Shania Twain
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Investing 101
Disclaimer: see below.
Anyone who has not noted the Trump rally (stock market) is a nominee for the 2017 Geico Rock Award. For those who may have missed it:
I have a number of managed portfolios/investment accounts: a pension, trad IRA, ROTH IRA, a non-IRA mutual fund, whole life insurance policy, maybe nine or ten different accounts in all. I assume any financial advisor worth her salt would recommend that I start to consolidate; some of these are incredibly small accounts. So many accounts are hard to keep track of. But I've noticed something interesting. Some of the managed portfolios/investment accounts have done very, very well; others have not participated in the Trump rally at all.
That suggests to me that my portfolio of portfolios is well diversified. If they were all doing equally bad, or equally good, it would suggest the managers were all doing the same thing. But as noted, some are doing fairly poorly; some are doing fairly well. I can't say for sure if any are really participating in the Trump rally to the extent one would expect.
So, why would I post that? To ask a question or posit an observation. If the market continues to melt up (as expected with the "Trump tax cuts yet to be announced") those funds that have not yet participated will eventually be "forced" to jump in, thus driving the market higher.
On the other hand, if the laggards are correct, holding back, expecting a correction (as expected once the GOP fails to deliver), then the laggards will a) look pretty good; and, b) use their "dry powder" to "dive in."
I don't know. It will be fun to watch.
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, travel, job, or relationship decisions based on anything you read here or think you may have read here.
Having said that, those interested in individual stock-picking, it seems like the current investment environment is an open-book test.
As if Venezuela doesn't have enough problems, its National Assembly
is now picking a fight with Russia's most powerful oil man. Igor
Sechin, known as Darth Vader in Russia, is the CEO of Rosneft and his
company is now being roadblocked by legislators who question the
legality of a 40% joint venture deal with a PdVSA subsidiary called
Petromonagas. Sechin says the deal is legal. Venezuela, which can use
all the money it can get, thinks otherwise.
On Thursday, the National Assembly took up issue over the proposed
sale, telling the Russian embassy on Friday that it was annulling
the $500 million deal with Rosneft. Petromnagas, formerly known as Cerro
Negro, is one of four strategic oil projects undertaken by Venezuela in
the Orinoco heavy oil basin. It produces around 170 thousand barrels
per day and 40% of that, or 60 thousand barrels, belong to Rosneft.
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That Which Does Not Kill You Makes You Stronger
-- Friedrich Nietzsche
Chuck Schumer, et al, might do well to read a bit of Nietzsche after this week of slow-rolling President Trump at every level. I will expand on this later if the spirit moves me.
Active rigs, down 10% for the week in North Dakota, starting the week at 40 active rigs, ending the week with 36:
2/10/2017
02/10/2016
02/10/2015
02/10/2014
02/10/2013
Active Rigs
36
41
137
196
185
One newpermit:
Operator: Armstrong Operating
Field: Wildcat (#33340)
Comment: Stark County -- Frenzel 1-35, NENE 35-139-96. This is generally considered "Red River" country; there is a "Heath" well in the area (dry); and, and there are a couple of "Silurian" wells, at least one of which was/is a pretty good well. See graphic:
Ten permits renewed:
EOG (5): five Wayzetta permits, all in Mountrail County
Whiting (3): three Charging Eagle permits in Dunn County
MRO (2): a Ryan permit and a Struthers USA permit, both in Dunn County
Six producing wells (DUCs) completed:
27391, 998, EOG, Parshall 68-1820H, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
28306,603, EOG, Parshall 70-19H, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
28401, 1,611, EOG, Parshall 153-1820H, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
28402, 428, EOG, Parshall 30-1820H, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
28404, 1,399, EOG, Parshall 31-1820H, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
28608, 264, EOG, Parshall 17-19HH, Parshall, t1/17; cum --
The link and the rest of the article later. Please share with educators. Nothing like a hurricane to get things moving in a positive direction.
New Orleans public schools: prior to Hurricane Katrina, NOPS was the second-worst performing school district in the second-worst state in the US for public education. Then Hurricane Katrina hit. Had God finally seen enough?
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How DAPL Protesters Were Funded
This is only part of the story. We talked about the "other" part of the story earlier (see below).
Throughout the protests surrounding the Dakota Access pipeline in
Morton County, N.D., many people have been asking how these protesters
are being funded. Anyone who takes even a moment to try to follow the
money cannot possibly avoid ending up on a page hosted by the charity
fundraising web platform GoFundMe.
Whether it’s the infamous “Veterans For Standing Rock”
with their missing $1.1 million, or another organization in the litany
of Standing Rock-based pages on the website, rough estimates for the
amount raised on these pages have been reported to be around $11
million. Just as a point of reference the State of North Dakota has
already spent roughly $30 million managing the crisis these donations
were meant to fund.
According to a friend of a friend of a friend who said something to a
reader who sent me a note, apparently the going rate for DAPL protesting
is:
$19/hour protesting
$1,000 up-front
round trip plane ticket to Bismarck
Actually, the correspondence is much shorter: protestor to non-protestor
to reader to me. $19/hour is well above the $15/hour minimum wage some
folks are advocating. The Bakken continues to be a great place to work.
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How Onerous Has/Have Regulatory Over-Reach, Federal Taxes Been?
Global crude oil demand: IEA raises growth estimate
from 1.3 million bopd to 1.4 million bopd. IEA also noted that OECD
crude oil storage had dropped below symbolic 3 billion bbls, but volumes
were growing in China and emerging markets.
Another record-setting day for the markets? The Dow is up109 points in early-afternoon trading. Significant market response during joint press conference, Trump and Abe.
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Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, travel, job, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or what you think you may have read here. This is also not a music site nor a dance site.
Another record-setting day for the markets? The Dow is up 65 points in early trading.
OPEC, first month's cut: according to Platts/EIA, production falls 1 million bopd to 32.06 million bopd, global oil output generally down 1.5 million bopd, via Twitter.
South Texas—and its primary trading hub, Agua Dulce—is emerging as the
fulcrum for U.S. natural gas producers and growing demand markets on the
Texas Gulf Coast and across the border in Mexico. Between the Freeport
and Corpus Christi LNG export projects and cross-border pipeline
projects to Mexico, nearly 4.0 Bcf/d of export capacity is being
developed in South Texas over the next few years. Meanwhile, U.S.
producers as far north as the Marcellus/Utica are jockeying to capture
this new demand.
Large investments are being made to expand and reverse
traditional pipeline flows across the Texas-Louisiana border to get gas
all the way down to South Texas and the Texas-Mexico border. But will
enough capacity be available when the demand shows up? Today, we break
down the natural gas supply/demand picture in South Texas and what it
will take to balance the market there as exports ramp up.