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Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Canadian Oil To Replace Venezuelan Crude; And Selling At A Discount -- What's Not To Like; WTI Up Solidly Over $64; Davos Continues -- January 23, 2018

Earthquake, Alaska: 7.9 magnitude, and they haven't even started fracking yet.

Talk radio: tariffs on solar cells is going to kill the domestic solar panel installation industry. President Trump walked away from the Paris global warming accord. Is there a pattern here?

Talk radio: Whirling Pool washers to increase 30% in price, from $500 to $650. Over 12 months that $150 comes to less than $15/month; it's a one-time expense; never needs repair (according to their advertising); and, last forever. Small price to pay to keep American jobs, making America great again; keeping a campaign promise. If overseas manufacturing companies are "dumping" or being subsidized by state governments, all's fair in love and war.

Putting things in perspective: will need replacing in less than a year or so



Putting things in perspective: ObamaCare increased monthly premiums by hundreds/thousands of dollars; one had to find a new insurance policy; and, one had to find a new physician. Somehow I think we'll survive the tariffs on large residential washing machines.

Talk radio: South Korea will build washing machine plants here in the US.

Davos:



What has Davos got to say? Link here.
Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio shared his market views on CNBC Tuesday from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
"A market blow-off" will be produced by stimulus fueled by cash from banks, corporations and investors, Dalio said. "If you're holding cash, you're going to feel pretty stupid," he added.
Bridgewater is the world's largest hedge fund, managing about $160 billion, according to its website. Dalio started the firm in 1975 out of his two-bedroom apartment in New York City. He is now worth an estimated $17 billion.
Dow: futures slightly up.

Disclaimer: this is not an investment page. Do not make any investment, financial, job, travel, or relationship-related decisions based on anything you read here or think you may have read here. If this is important to you, go to the source.

ONEOK, closed up about 3% yesterday: 

ONEOK, Inc. announced financial and volume guidance for 2018.
The company expects full-year 2018 net income to be in the range of $955-$1,155million. It anticipates adjusted EBITDA $2,215-$2,415 million, an increase of 20% from the previous guidance of 2017.
ONEOK reiterated the average annual dividend growth in the range of 9-11% through 2021.
Notably, it does not expect to issue additional equity in 2018 and into 2019
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Back to the Bakken

Active rigs:

$64.131/23/201801/23/201701/23/201601/23/201501/23/2014
Active Rigs583847157189


RBN Energy: rising Canadian production, takeaway constraints and WCS price discounts.
The recent collapse in the price of Western Canadian Select (WCS) versus West Texas Intermediate and the 12-day shutdown of the Keystone Pipeline in November 2017 put the spotlight on a major issue: Alberta production is rising, pipeline takeaway capacity out of the province has not kept pace, and pipes are running so full that some owners have been forced to apportion access to them.
Storage and crude-by-rail shipments have served as a cushion of sorts, absorbing shocks like the Keystone outage and the apportionments, but with more production gains expected in 2018-19, that cushion seems uncomfortably thin and unforgiving. With all this going on, we decided that it’s time for a deep-dive look at Western Canadian production, takeaway options and WCS prices — the whole kit and caboodle. Today, we begin a new series on Canadian crude and bitumen production, the infrastructure in place (and being planned) to deal with it, and the effects of takeaway constraints on pricing.
Western Canadian crude oil production has grown from about 2.5 MMb/d in 2011 to almost 4.0 MMb/d by the end of 2017. 
Despite these gains — most of which came from Alberta’s oil sands region — times are tough in the Canadian oil patch. While other North American producers have been enjoying the gradual rise in WTI pricing over the past year, Canadian producers have suffered through declining prices for WCS, the Canadian heavy blend crude benchmark — especially over the past few months. Figure 1 shows that WCS maintained a pricing discount to WTI of around $10/bbl through most of 2017 (all in U.S. dollars). Beginning in late summer, however, the WCS discount to WTI began to grow, initially to around $11-12/bbl during September and October, and then crashing during November and December to around $25/bbl.

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