The market and economic indicators: Chicago PMI at six-and-a-half-year high. 67.6 vs 62.5 consensus. Stock
market to close at 71st record high for the NYSE -- this has never
happened before.
From the website:
The ISM-Chicago Business Survey, a regional view of the national economy, is a time-tested, market-moving report. The CHICAGO Report is released to the public 8:45 a.m. CT on the last working day each month. The Chicago Business Barometer, summarizing current business activity, also is known as Chicago Purchasing Manager Index or Chicago PMI. The Barometer is considered to be a leading indicator of the USA economy.
Again, this begs the question: what was President Obama doing for eight years?
Gasoline demand:
link here.
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Power Plants Bloom Even As Electricity Rates Drop
A glut of gas from U.S. shale fields is fueling a power-plant construction boom in several Northeastern states, despite fierce competition that has caused wholesale electricity prices to plummet.
The key for electricity producers is location. Having access to transmission lines to move megawatts to market is vital; but in addition by building close to natural-gas reserves, power producers can more easily access cheap fuel supplies.
In Pennsylvania and Ohio, which sit above the prolific Marcellus Shale formation, companies including Invenergy LLC and Calpine Corp. CPN 0.07% are building gas-fired power plants capable of generating a combined 8.6 gigawatts when they come online between now and 2020, according to federal data.
That output, which is enough to power up to 8.6 million homes, would require about 1.5 billion cubic feet of gas a day—roughly the equivalent of the daily flow through a major pipeline.The build-out comes as American shale drillers continue pumping so much gas that the price of the fuel has plunged from highs of over $13 per million British thermal units in 2008 to less than $3 per million BTUs today.
“The economics are compelling for gas-fired power,” said Andrew Slaughter, head of the Deloitte Center for Energy Solutions.
The power is bound for PJM Interconnection LLC, a power grid that serves some or all of 13 states, including Illinois, Michigan and New Jersey as well as Ohio and Pennsylvania. Competition among wholesale power producers in the market served by PJM—which stands for Pennsylvania, Jersey, Maryland—has become so fierce that a megawatt hour traded for $29.23 last year, the lowest level since 1999, as far back as the grid’s independent market monitor tracks prices.
Much more at the link.
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Gloom And Doom
This story has been told and re-told many times the past several weeks. Apparently once one writer sees an interesting article, other writers pick up on it and re-write the same story.
From Bloomberg: all that new shale oil may not be enough as big discoveries drop.
Discoveries of new reserves this year were the fewest on record and replaced just 11 percent of what was produced, according to a Dec. 21 report by consultant Rystad Energy. While shale wells are creating a glut now, without more investment in bigger, conventional supply, the world may see output deficits as soon as 2019, according to Canadian producer Suncor Energy Inc.
“Tight rock is not going to solve the global supply-demand issue,” said Adam Waterous, chief executive officer at the Calgary-based Waterous Energy Fund, which invests as much as C$400 million ($265 million). “Its going to take a long time for those mega-projects to come back on.”
Hydraulic-fracturing technology made it possible to squeeze crude from tight-rock formations and turned the U.S. into the world’s top producer. But it also sent the global benchmark for oil tumbling from $115 a barrel in 2014 to less than $55 in October. That’s eroded the incentive for companies to invest billions of dollars on new reserves that take years to develop but can produce for decades.
Oil prices would need to climb to $80 and remain at that level for two years to justify the costly deep-water projects off the coasts of West Africa or Brazil, Waterous said. And even then, it could take a decade before crude from those investments would arrive on the market, he said. Prices topped $66 this week.
Personally, I find these stories tedious. One or two stories, fine. A half-dozen stories in as many days? Tedious.
See
graphs, updates, and commentary at this December 22, 2017, post.
And, while we are at it, this is a real hoot,
from FuelFix, November 26, a 2017, post.
By the way, a reminder in case you missed it. The biggest oil discovery in decades was made by an Exxon-Hess joint venture off the coast of Guyana in 2016. Here is
an update of that discovery from Reuters, dated June 16, 2017, earlier this year.
- Exxon Mobil and partners will spend $4.4 billion to develop the Liza oilfield off the Guyana coast
- this is considered a megaproject
- Liza oilfield: low-cost
- should tap 450 million bbls of oil and pump about 120,000bopd when it comes online in 2020
- Hess' share of the project: $1 billion
- the Guyana announcement from Exxon and partners Hess Corp and CNOOC was the fifth deepwater project to gain approvals this year (2017)
BP and Reliance Industries also announced (this same week) that they would spend $6 billion to develop natural gas reserves off the Indian coast