I don't have data for wells coming off confidential list today. However, I am eager to see the data on this well that should be released tomorrow:
32915, 584, Oasis, Hagen Banks 5198 13-6 11B, Banks, 50 stages; 10 million lbs, mesh, large/ceramic, a huge well; 55K in one month; 40K in another month; t11/7; cum 152K 2/18;
Monthly Production Data:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
2-2018
28
55859
55895
33776
107718
80003
27416
BAKKEN
1-2018
20
20282
20246
13897
35684
35471
0
BAKKEN
12-2017
31
40015
40015
27561
65005
64674
0
BAKKEN
11-2017
30
24215
24436
30450
42558
42238
0
BAKKEN
10-2017
18
11836
11615
19390
29524
15978
13354
BOE: 13,329 boe natural gas + 55,895 bo crude oil = 69,224 boe.
Later, 7:56 p.m local, Las Cruces: overnight here; will leave early in a.m. Heading for Tucson tomorrow. Strong winds tonight in Las Cruces area. Otherwise, uneventful.
Abilene, George Hamilton IV
Original Post
Location: Eastland, TX; west of Ft Worth, on I-20,
heading west. How big is Texas? After driving about 75 miles from
Grapevine, heading west toward Arizona, I see this sign: 545 miles to El
Paso.
Note:
blogging will be less frequent
I won't get to comments as quickly
typographical and "factual" errors won't be corrected as quickly as I would like
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.
Quick! Without looking at the caption in the second picture, in which country was each picture below taken? Hint: one picture was taken in the one of the most technologically advanced countries with the #1 economy in the world; the other was taken in a third world, developing country. This link will be blocked by the google app; the other is linked here.
The number of Americans claiming new unemployment benefits has never been so low for so long.
Initial jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs across the U.S., decreased by 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 233,000 in the week ended April 7, the Labor Department said Thursday. This means claims have now held below 300,000 for 162 consecutive weeks, cementing the longest streak for weekly records dating back to 1967.
The current streak eclipsed the previous longest stretch that ended in April 1970.
The consistently low claims levels point to labor market health because they mean relatively few Americans are losing their jobs and applying for benefits to tide them over until they can find new employment.
Someone noted at the WSJ linked article:
I
can't give all the credit to Trump running for and being President.
162 weeks ago today was March 5th, 2015. Trump didn't announce his
candidacy until 14 weeks (102 days) later on June 16, 2015.
So Trump is only responsible for 90% of this good news.
We wouldn't be seeing this news if the pant suit grandma had won.
As Permian crude differentials continue to widen, trading at a
$8.45/bbl discount to Magellan East Houston this week, a lot of people
are pointing fingers at midstream companies for not completing new
takeaway pipeline projects quickly enough. But even in the oil patch, it
takes two to tango and producers can also share some of the blame.
Historically, the focus in the Permian has been on larger producers,
with their sprawling acreage positions and their focus on creating
long-term competitive advantages through efficient drilling programs.
Many of the smaller, private equity-backed producers adopted more
short-term strategies. Their game has been to prove undervalued acreage
and then flip those assets to more substantial players. But these
strategies are beginning to change. Today, we continue our series on
Permian differentials with a look at how the recent ramp-up in the
development of second- and third-tier production areas is affecting the
region’s crude oil output, pipeline takeaway constraints and price
differentials.
Permian crude production is growing at a breakneck pace, pipeline
takeaway constraints are worsening by the day and, as a result, Permian
producers without takeaway capacity locked up have been taking a big hit
on crude prices. We’ve seen this movie before (Figure 1), most recently
back in 2014, when (like now) rising production pushed outgoing
pipeline capacity to the max and the price spreads between Midland and
destinations at the Cushing hub in Oklahoma widened dramatically (blue
line, red oval to left). Earlier this week, the spread between West
Texas Intermediate (WTI) at Cushing vs. WTI at Midland stood at
$5.65/bbl (blue line, red oval to right), while the spread between
Midland and Magellan East Houston (MEH; orange line, red oval to right),
which we started tracking in 2016, was $8.45/bbl. Two weeks ago, these
same spreads were only $2.70/bbl and $4.95/bbl, respectively.