My in-box is filled with links to stories that need to be reported, but for the moment, those stories will have to wait.
I had a long note on "recession" ready to go but the whole topic no longer interests me. I deleted it and won't be posting it. I'll just post "the poll" at the sidebar at the right.
USAF: the "couple of fighters in the photo below are F-15s, with tail sign "LN," RAF Lakenheath, England. When I was assigned there, I flew right seat, F-111.
How 'bout them Cowboys? Link here.
Later: see first comment. Historical value of the Dallas Cowboys here. Imagine their value if they win a playoff game. LOL.
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Back to the Bakken
Far Side: link here.
WTI: drops below $93.
Natural gas: $7.826.
Active rigs: 46 or thereabouts.
Tuesday, August 2, 2022: 2 for the month, 33 for the quarter, 372 for the year
- 38169, conf, CLR, LCU Foster FIU 6-28H1,
Monday, August 1, 2022: 1for the month, 32 for the quarter, 371 for the year
- 38701, conf, Summit Carbon Solutions, LLC, Slash Lazy H 5,
Sunday, July 31, 2022: 31 for the month, 31 for the quarter, 370 for the year
- 38168, conf, CLR, LCU Foster FIU 5-28H1,
Saturday, July 30, 2022: 30 for the month, 30 for the quarter, 369 for the year
- 37009, conf, CLR, LCU Reckitt Federal 3-22H1,
RBN Energy: will the propane market be prepared for winter? It depends. Part 2.
The official start of propane heating season is only two months away,
and inventories are skinny, pretty close to the five-year minimum.
Should that be a concern? After all, stocks were at the low end of the
range last year, and it was a relatively benign market, with few supply
chain disruptions. But there’s a potential gotcha in that statement.
Because last year the first three months of winter were quite mild in
propane country. What would happen if the market were hit with weather
events like what we saw during the “polar vortex” of 2013-14, a winter
etched into the minds of all propaners who lived through it? Obviously,
the outcome would be quite different. In today’s RBN blog, we continue
our series on the upcoming propane heating season with a look at the
challenges that unusually cold weather could bring.
This is the second episode of a blog series focused on the outlook for
U.S. propane markets during the upcoming 2022-23 heating season. Part 1 was mostly a look in the rear-view mirror, covering the huge increase
in export volumes over the past few years, the wide swings in domestic
propane seasonal demand, and a cycle-by-cycle review of propane price
behavior over the past 18 months. The bottom line is that last year
propane prices spiked way up prior to the onset of winter due to a
confluence of bullish market developments, then virtually collapsed in
November and December when winterlike weather failed to arrive on cue.
In essence, prices were high when marketers were building stocks and low
when it was time to move those supplies to market. That is not the way
it is supposed to happen and can be painful for any company not using
the most robust hedging strategies.