Previous quarterly dividend: $7.38.
New quarterly dividend: $8.57, with indicated annual yield of 14.93%.
- record date: 9/6/22
- pay date: 9/16/22
Previous quarterly dividend: $7.38.
New quarterly dividend: $8.57, with indicated annual yield of 14.93%.
I simply find this amazing. Amazon continues to expand delivery options.
Amazon’s next store update will let you digitally explore shopping malls and pick up new clothes and items that'll be delivered to you the exact same day.
The new pilot program is coming to 15 cities across the US including Chicago, Washington, Seattle, Las Vegas, and Dallas (I don't know if it includes the entire DFW metroplex).
If you live in one of these places (and have an Amazon Prime membership) you’ll be able to access digital versions of your local mall’s Diesel, Pacsun, Superdry, and GNC – picking out clothes and items just like you would from the shelves.
Once you’ve placed your order, an Amazon delivery driver will then go pick it up and bring it to you later that same day – just like a takeout delivery service such as GrubHub (which is free for a year with Prime) or DoorDash but for regular stores. Unfortunately, even though this is a Prime benefit, you don’t automatically get free delivery – you’ll have to spend at least $25 on your order or cough up $2.99 to get your new goodies.
Updates
January 18, 2023: initial production data posted here.
Original Post
Four-well pad to the west:
Four-well pad to the east:
A singleton, farther east:
Pool | Date | Days | BBLS Oil | Runs | BBLS Water | MCF Prod | MCF Sold | Vent/Flare |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BAKKEN | 6-2022 | 2 | 1252 | 477 | 2048 | 497 | 455 | 36 |
BAKKEN | 5-2022 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 4-2022 | 9 | 152 | 708 | 167 | 788 | 766 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 3-2022 | 8 | 341 | 0 | 282 | 392 | 372 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 2-2022 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 1-2022 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 12-2021 | 27 | 258 | 457 | 13 | 310 | 222 | 21 |
BAKKEN | 11-2021 | 21 | 259 | 244 | 8 | 357 | 307 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 10-2021 | 31 | 606 | 467 | 79 | 1213 | 1130 | 6 |
BAKKEN | 9-2021 | 30 | 518 | 476 | 53 | 1058 | 950 | 34 |
A singleton, to the southeast:
A reader alerted me to these wells. The reader wrote:
NDIC well #17213 Maverick 44-12 has been a lackluster well at best.
In the profile, it has topped out around 600 barrels of oil for a 30 day period over the last year.
NDIC well #36245 Maverick 2D MBH just was released from confidential today, and is located in the same area.
The Maverick 44-12 was offline for all of May, assuming it was for some fracking work on the neighboring wells. When it came back online in June, it produced 1200 barrels for a two day period. The well file does not show anything that I can find relating to a work over on that well, so I am assuming it is due to the neighboring fracs.
My reply:
That is incredibly impressive. That 1,200 bbls of crude oil over two days extrapolates to nearly 20,000 bbls crude oil over 30 days.
The Bailey oil field and the Reunion Creek oil field (MRO) is well known for the "halo effect." This may suggest the "halo effect" may be relevant in the Dimmick Lake. It will be fascinating to watch.
The NDIC GIS map server does not yet show the horizontals, but it's obvious these new wells parallel the older Maverick well.
Frack data has not yet been posted for the newer wells.
WTI: $94.42. The drop in the price of WTI seems to have slowed; perhaps bottomed again.
OPEC+ met this week; will raise production quota by 250,000 bopd (a drop in the bucket in the big scheme of things) and production provides for domestic consumption and export, and "production" does not necessarily follow "production quota." One can argue that OPEC+ increase in crude oil production is barely keeping up with their own domestic use, particularly in Saudi Arabia where the kingdom is increasing refinery capacity to export refined products.Natural gas: $7.706. Many see this drop perplexing. All things being equal, it suggests analysts are looking toward:
Active rigs: NDIC reports 46 active rigs.
Six new permits, #39121 - #39126, inclusive:
Map:
When I first saw this quote, I misinterpreted it. I now understand what he was saying. It means nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Recall: Devon is now operating in the Bakken.
Electric-vehicle startup Rivian Automotive Inc. is warning that planned revisions to the EV tax credit would put the young car maker at a disadvantage to more-established competitors.
The proposed changes to the federal tax subsidy, which has been in place for years as a way to make EVs more affordable, are part of a broader legislative package deal between Sen. Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) to cut carbon emissions and healthcare costs.
If it passes in its current form, the new legislation would extend the $7,500 federal tax credit for EVs but add new restrictions that Rivian said would make most of its vehicles ineligible for the incentive program.
Pretty funny.
Everyone was watching Nvidia and Nancy Pelosi. Great head fake. LOL.
RBN Energy: what's behind the mid-Atlantic / Southeast natural gas price spikes. Archived.
Just downstream from the Appalachian supply basin — where daily spot natural gas prices are among the lowest in the country — cash and forward prices in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast have rocketed, becoming the highest gas prices in the land, and in some cases are at never-before-seen levels for this time of year.
Opening comment:
AAPL:
INTC, link here, pay wall:
While badly wounded, Intel isn’t dead yet.
And at least one analyst thinks there could be considerably more value in the beleaguered chip company’s shares than Wall Street generally believes.
Let’s be clear: The situation is bleak. Intel last week posted one of the company’s worst quarterly reports ever, along with hugely disappointing guidance. Intel is suffering the effects of slower personal computer sales (which many had already expected), softer demand from data center customers (which was an unhappy surprise), and continued market share loss to rival Advanced Micro Devices.
One word: Nokia.
LNG, global:
MPC:
********************************
Back to the Bakken
Far Side: link here.
WTI: $94.17.
Natural gas: $7.783
Thursday, August 4, 2022: 3 for the month, 34 for the quarter, 373 for the year
Wednesday, August 3, 2022: 2 for the month, 33 for the quarter, 372 for the year
Tuesday, August 2, 2022: 2 for the month, 33 for the quarter, 372 for the year
RBN Energy: what's behind the mid-Atlantic / Southeast natural gas price spikes. Archived.
Just downstream from the Appalachian supply basin — where daily spot natural gas prices are among the lowest in the country — cash and forward prices in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast have rocketed, becoming the highest gas prices in the land, and in some cases are at never-before-seen levels for this time of year.
No doubt it’s been a sweltering summer so far, and low storage levels aren’t helping either. But there’s more to the price premiums than that. Limited access to supply and constraints on Williams’ Transco Pipeline — the primary system delivering gas to the region — have created a demand “island” there just as persistent heatwaves boosted cooling demand. Moreover, without additional pipeline capacity, the dynamics unfolding this summer could become a regular feature of the Southeast/Mid-Atlantic markets. In today’s RBN blog, we break down the factors driving regional prices to new heights.
We’ll start our analysis with what caught our attention in recent weeks: the eye-popping pricing anomalies that emerged in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast regions starting around mid-June. Daily spot price history from our good friends at NGI shows that the national benchmark Henry Hub ran up to nearly $10/MMBtu in early June but lost steam in the second half of the month and ended June with a $6 handle. However, Mid-Atlantic and Southeast prices, represented by trading hubs along the Transco corridor, began to diverge from Henry Hub around that time.
Transco Zone 5 cash, which represents the Carolinas, Virginia and Maryland markets, had been averaging just 17 cents above Henry in the April-May timeframe and 44 cents above Henry Hub in the first 13 days of June. But prices there abruptly jumped to an all-time high for the June-July timeframe at $16.43/MMBtu on June 14, more than $7 above Henry Hub that day. For the rest of June, it averaged nearly $9.60/MMBtu, more than $2.50 above Henry Hub, and in July, Transco Zone 5 cash topped $11/MMBtu, more than $4 above Henry. Transco Zone 3 (Louisiana) and Zone 4 (Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia) June-July average prices, which had traded a few cents back of Henry in previous years, surged to premiums of $1.60-$1.75 to Henry.