Poll: reminder -- the corona virus vaccine poll at the sidebar at the right. Now this news: AstraZeneca and Gilead in mega-deal merger talks. Link here. Details regarding this poll at this post.
Focus on fracking: link here.
Futures: all major indices in the green. The Dow futures up 180 points at 6:31 a.m. CT.
- MRO: up 25%
- OXY: up 19%
- AAPL: down 0.32% -- after being up over $9.00 on Friday, AAPL is down about a buck in Monday morning futures;
Oil:
- Brent: $42.18
- OPEC basket: $36.83, link here.
- WTI: $39.39
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Back to the Bakken
Active rigs:
$39.39 | 6/8/2020 | 06/08/2019 | 06/08/2018 | 06/08/2017 | 06/08/2016 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 12 | 64 | 61 | 52 | 26 |
Ten wells coming off the confidential list today, over the weekend --
Monday, June 8, 2020: 31 for the month; 176 for the quarter, 403 for the year:
- 36238, drl/NC, Slawson, Periscope Federal 1SLH, Big Bend, no production data,
- 35188, drl/drl, XTO, Hoffmann 21X-6BXC, Siverston, no production data,
- 31791, drl/drl, Petro-Hunt, Phelps Trust 153-94-6B-2-3H, Charlson, no production data,
- 36468, drl/NC, Slawson, Periscope Federal 3-10-11-12H, Big Bend, no production data,
- 36237, drl/NC, Slawson, Neptang 3-15-22H, Big Bend, no production data,
- 36473, drl/NC, Slawson, Periscope Federal 9-10-7TFH, Big Bend, no production data,
- 36454, drl/drl, BR, Glacierfill 1A, Clear Creek, no production data,
- 36362, drl/drl, Slawson, Gunslinger Federal l1-12-1H, Sand Creek, no production data,
- 35748, SI/NC, Zavanna, Usher 28-21 2TFH, Poe, t--; um 78K in five months; see this post;
- 31790, drl/drl, Petro-Hunt, Phelps Trust 153-94-6B-2-2H, Charlson, no production data,
Mexican demand for motor gasoline and diesel has plummeted this spring due to COVID-19 — so has demand for LPG. So far, Pemex — Mexico’s state-owned energy company and by far the country’s largest supplier of these commodities — has responded by slashing how much gasoline, diesel and LPG it is importing from the U.S. and holding its own production steady, despite the fact that Pemex’s refining margins are now deep in negative territory. What does Pemex’s focus on money-losing refining mean for U.S. exports to Mexico going forward? Today, we begin a short series on the ongoing competition between U.S. refiners and Pemex for market share south of the border.
The Shale Revolution, the opening up of Mexican energy markets and troubles at Petróleos Mexicános (Pemex) combined to spur a booming new business in Texas over the past five years or so: the export of large volumes of gasoline, diesel and LPG to Mexico by rail, ship and pipeline. As we said a couple of years ago, falling production of refined product and propane at Pemex’s aging refineries created a supply vacuum that U.S. refiners, marketers and shippers were all too eager to fill. At the same time, the liberalization of Mexican energy markets finally allowed players other than Pemex to become involved in motor-fuel distribution and retailing. In 2013, U.S. gasoline exports to Mexico averaged only 184 Mb/d, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration; by 2019, they had risen by about 150%, to 472 Mb/d. The same holds true for diesel exports, which rose from 115 Mb/d to 287 Mb/d over the same period. As for LPG exports, they tripled, from 50 Mb/d in 2013 to 149 Mb/d last year.
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