GM: misses. Maintains full-year guidance.
AMZN: to increase Prime membership by up to 43% -- in Europe.
Sayonara; Intel
- M2 MacBook Air
- Apple has replaced last remaining Intel-made component in newest laptop
**********************************
Back to the Bakken
The Bakken is back -- NGI. Link here.
Far Side: link here.
WTI: $98.38.
Natural gas: $8.975.
Active rigs: 46 or thereabouts
Thursday, July 28, 2022: 28 for the month, 28 for the quarter, 367 for the year
- 38667, conf, CLR, Bang 4-4H,
Wednesday, July 27, 2022: 27 for the month, 27 for the quarter, 366 for the year
- 38614, conf, CLR, Bang 13-4H1,
Tuesday, July 26, 2022: 26 for the month, 26 for the quarter, 365 for the year
- 38676, conf, CLR, Bang 5-4H1,
- 37496, conf, Petro-Hunt, State 159-94-25A-36-2H,
RBN Energy: LNG outages and Russian aggression send global gas prices soaring -- again.
Escalating Russian aggression and LNG supply shortfalls, exacerbated by outages in the U.S. and Australia, have put the pressure back on international gas markets and sent prices in Europe and Asia back toward their winter highs. Around the world, high prices have pushed some end users out of the LNG market and spurred on the global, cross-commodity energy shortage that has had utilities and governments scrambling, sometimes unsuccessfully, to keep the power on. The European Union (EU) is pushing its members to reduce gas consumption by 15% through winter and parts of Europe face austerity measures. Some European countries are turning back to coal generation as the continent prepares for the prospect of a winter with less — or potentially even no — Russian gas. In today’s RBN blog, we look at where things stand in the international gas market and the ramifications for the winter ahead and beyond.
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