Friday, January 5, 2024

A Muscial Interlude -- January 5, 2024

Locator46468MUSIC

Katie Melua, from wiki:

Ketevan "Katie" Melua, born 16 September, 1984, is a Georgian and British singer and songwriter. 

Melua was born in Kutaisi, Georgia, and raised in Belfast and London.

Under the management of composer Mike Batt, she was signed to the small Dramatico record label.

She made her musical debut in 2003 and within three years, she was the United Kingdom's best-selling female artist as well as Europe's highest selling European female artist.

In November, 2003, Melua released her first album, Call Off the Search, which reached the top of the United Kingdom album charts and sold 1.8 million copies in its first five months of release.

Her second album, Piece by Piece, was released in September, 2005, and to date has gone platinum (one million units sold) four times.

She released her third studio album Pictures in October 2007.

According to the Sunday Times Rich List 2008, Melua had amassed a fortune of £18 million, making her the seventh-richest British musician under the age of 30.

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Now, The Music

Something light this evening.




Week 1: January 1, 2024 -- January 7, 2024

Locator46467TOPSTORIES. 

Top, top story

  • the earth hangs in the balance (John Kerry, Algore, Greta) but for Biden, geopolitics more important
    • Biden won't allow tax credits for EV autos with Chinese batteries
    • "For want of a rider, the battle was lost. For want of a battle, the kingdom was lost. And all for the want of a horseshoe nail."

Top story

  • regional "wars" everywhere: Gaza, Red Sea, Indian Ocean, Ukraine
  • all are in somewhat off a "steady state" situation

Top international non-energy story:

  • Gaza: Israel shows no sign of letting up
  • Ukraine: not looking good for the home team
Top international energy story:
  • OPEC+ no longer in control
  • US producing at record levels
  • Venezuela about to flood the global markets with oil
  • Germany: de-industrializing due to high-priced energy (natural gas and electricity)

Top national non-energy story:

  • US equity markets snap nine-week "winning" streak
  • US economy surprisingly strong; consumer surprisingly resilient
  • auto sector: best year for the industry since 2019;
  • November jobs: unexpected and higher
    • higher than forecast
    • unemployment remains unchanged

Top national energy story:

  • US LNG:
    • US: #1 global exports
    • Qatar falls to #2
  • US crude oil
    • field production at record levels
    • blowing Saudi away
  • three consecutive months > 13 million bopd
  • two different offshore wind projects in the news this past week
    • huge offshore wind project off east coast of US scrapped by developers (Equinor, BP)
    • first wind turbine of new offshore wind project off Martha's Vineyard up and running, providing 5MW of electricity; 

Focus on fracking: link here.

Top North Dakota non-energy story:

Top North Dakota energy story:

Geoff Simon's  quick connects: link here.

Bakken economy

  • plugging along;
  • the buzz? Risks of NG takeaway capacity in the New Year!
Commentary

Eight New Oil And Gas Permits; Six Permits Renewed; Two Permits Canceled -- January 5, 2023

Locator: 46466B.

WTI: $73.81. Very impressive considering the strength of the dollar.

Active rigs: 32.

Eight new oil & gas permits, #40430 - #40438, inclusive, except #30433, a SWD well:

  • Operators: Enerplus (6); Grayson Mill, Neptune Operating
  • Fields: Spotted Horn (McKenzie); Siverston (McKenzie); Buffalo Wallow (McKenzie)
  • Comments:
    • Enerplus has permits for a six-well "Valor" pad: Strength, Icon, Prowess, Gallant, Purpose, and Fearless; 
      • to be sited at 249/250 FNL and between 2351 FWL and 2523 FEL
    • Grayson Mill has a permit for a Scott well; NWNE 13-150-99; 
      • to be sited 290 FNL and 2420 FEL; and,
    • Neptune Operating has a permit for a Gustafson well, lot 2, section 5-148-100; 
      • to be sited 340 FNL andd 2410 FEL;

Six permits renewed:

  • Lime Rock (3): State, Kary, and Schneider; the first two in Cabernet (Dunn) and Schneider in Fayette (Dunn)
  • Hunt Oil (3): three Redmond permits, Clear Water (Mountrail)

Two permits canceled:

  • 37501, SGOC, Bighorn, Dunn County;
  • 40362, Grayson Mill, Scott, McKenzie County

Three producing wells (DUCs) reported as completed:

  • 39411, 1,754, MRO, Hegge 21-17TFH, Killdeer, see maps and wells at this post:
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN11-202330220742207950636142701418517
BAKKEN10-202329210782105151266130541290376
BAKKEN9-202316153541531257361127361258370
  • 39575, 639, Iron Oil Operating, Buffalo 5-17-20H, Buffalo Wallow;
  • 39576, 636, Iron Oil Operating, Buffalo 4-17-20H, Buffalo Wallow;

Haruspicy -- January 5, 2024

Locator: 46465ECON.

Breaking: US Supreme Court to take Colorado - Trump ballot case. My hunch: once multiple states started making different opinions, it was time for the federal court to get involved.

Two links:

Look at the sharp change in direction, factory orders. It's just a single snapshot, but it's pretty remarkable:

Look at sharp change in thoughts re: GDP by FOMC members:

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Duolingo: Spanish 

I reached the 1200-day milestone today.

Today's Close -- January 5, 2024

Locator: 46464INV.

Link here (dynamic).

Nvidia (NVID) link here:

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Energy

NOG, Chord: downgraded, link here. From BofA:

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Meanwhile, In "Big Sky Country"

Link.

South end of Flathead Lake, looking north.

Embiggen -- Word Of The Day -- January 5, 2023

Locator: 46463SCRABBLE.

Three links:


And don't forget "simp," but unrelated, as far as I know, to the Simpsons:

BRK -- Links Going Into 2024 -- January 5, 2024

Locator: 46462BRK.



https://www.fool.com/investing/2024/01/04/3-no-brainer-warren-buffett-stocks-buy-right-now/

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The Book Page

Wow, wow, wow! A three-page review of Walter Isaacson's new biography, Elon Musk. Link here. That's about equal to six pages in The New Yorker. Worth the annual subscription to The New York Review of Books. The review begins: 
When he was a boy, Elon Musk became a nerd. It started the usual way. Small and socially awkward, he got beat up a lot. Once, a group of kids at his school in South Africa kicked him in the head so many times that his brother didn’t recognize him. This gruesome detail appears early on in Elon Musk, the new authorized biography by the journalist and author Walter Isaacson, and there are many others like it. The young Musk was incessantly bullied, above all by his “swaggering and manly” father, Errol, an electromechanical engineer with a predilection for zany side hustles. Most successful was his illegal emerald business, which involved smuggling the stones out of Zambia, getting them cut in South Africa, and selling them to jewelers overseas. Less successful was his attempt to cheat the local casino in Pretoria by manipulating a roulette wheel with microwave energy. “His career had many ups and downs,” Isaacson writes, and these shifting fortunes, coupled with Errol’s extravagant tastes—for a period, he drove a Rolls-Royce convertible—kept the family sliding between the upper and lower rungs of the middle class. Regardless, Errol always found time to terrorize his eldest son. He never tired of telling Elon how worthless he was.

I never did read Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs. Wiki. I had my world view / myth of Jobs and didn't want to have it altered.

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The Sports Page

Link here.

The one guy I won't watch.

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Menwith Hill Station

From another blog:

Flashback: Menwith Hill Station

A huge part of my life back in 2004 or thereabouts.

Link here.

I did not know this site (the blog) existed. I happened to run across it when I did a "person's name" search. The individual for whom I was searching is completely off the grid and has been for as long as I've known him / her. There should be no way that individual could have gotten me to the linked site, but there you have it. 

I had pretty much "forgotten" about MHS until I read Kim Wicken's book on Lexington, the racehorse.

Also, Horse.

Wow, I still have such great memories of MHS, Yorkshire, walking after midnight, the meteor showers, the soakings. 

The walks were incredible. I really don't know to what I can compare Yorkshire with regard to walking.

I would do almost anything to return, but I won't give up Sophia.

Maybe when I'm ninety years old.

Jobs Report — The Market Doesn’t Like The Numbers — Two Words: Hot, Unexpected —January 5, 2024

Locator: 46461JOBS. 

CNBC talk, not me:

  • huge jobs jump — higher than expected.
  • wage increase — higher than expected.
  • numbers good for the economy, good for union movement (?); not good for equities. 
    • what a great country!
    • 36th month of labor growth.
    • 5th longest on record.
  • unemployment rate unchanged at 3.7%.
  • no indication for any Fed cut any time soon. 
    • narrative starting to change. 
    • From “how high” to “how long.”
  • S&P might end the year no higher than it entered. Stock pickers’ market.
  • 1H24 is going to be rough. Likely to be a very slow 1Q24.

Unemployment: Table A-15.

Barron’s: jobs report — two words — hot, unexpected; link here.

The U.S. added  216,000  jobs in December, a strong showing that surpassed many forecasts and underscored that the labor market remains resilient.

The end of 2023 continued a recent trend of surprises on the upside. Employment rose even faster than in November, when a revised 173,000 jobs were added following the resolution of strikes by auto workers and the Hollywood actors’ union. Economists surveyed by FactSet anticipated that the U.S. would add 160,000 jobs in December..

Stocks immediately fell in response to the news, which appeared to make it less likely that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates as soon as investors had expected. 

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Autos

Ford: annual sales increase lower than the overall industry's growth. Link here.

EVsFord loses EV bragging rights to GMlink here. Best summary to date.

For the full year, Ford shipped almost 2 million vehicles in the U.S., up about 7% compared with 2022. BEV sales came in at about 73,000 units, up 17%. Hybrid (fake EVs) sales amounted to almost 134,000 units in 2023, up 25% from 2022. 
Despite Ford’s sales growth, General Motors still edged its rival out for the title of second-largest EV maker in the U.S., behind Tesla. Ford had held the No. 2 spot in 2022. GM shipped 75,585 BEVs in 2023
Tesla U.S. numbers aren’t available yet, but its lead is immense. It probably sold roughly 600,000 BEVs in the U.S. in 2023.

EVs, the Chevy Corvette EV: link here.

The Z06? Chevrolet still makes the Z06. 

The Z06 is an incredibly special car. It was our Performance Car of the Year just last year, and rightfully so. GM reverse engineered the Ferrari 458 Speciale, one of the greatest cars in history, and succeeded. You want that. You need that. And it’s only about $6,000 extra, spec-for-spec.

As much as the author raves about the E-Ray, his bottom line?
Would I personally choose the hybrid variant of the Corvette? Not as long as the Z06 is around, I wouldn’t. That car -- the Z06 --  is simply too special, the cost difference is incremental, and I don’t have much rain or snow to contend with. But the E-Ray is the look into our Corvette future for sure, so choose wisely, and be thankful the choice still exists.

Personal investing:

  • remain fully invested, hold no cash; 
    • horizon: 30-year rolling; 
    • bucket list of tickers: 5-year performance
  • move RMDs to 529s
  • energy dividends will be a very bright spot
  • opportunity to build positions in tech
  • 2024 to be a watershed year for EVs and entire renewable energy story
  • Apple: hope springs eternal. AAPL needs some really good news. 

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Back to the Bakken

WTI: $72.96. Nice.

MondayJanuary 8, 2024: 6 for the month; 6 for the quarter, 6 for the year
39929, conf, Neptune Operating, Jacobson 17-8-5 3H, 

SundayJanuary 7, 2024: 5 for the month; 5 for the quarter, 5 for the year
39930, conf, Neptune Operating, Jacobson 17-8-5 2H, 

SaturdayJanuary 6, 2024: 4 for the month; 4 for the quarter, 4 for the year
39025, conf, Hess, GO-Golden Valley-157-96-2833H-2,
39024, conf, Hess, GO-Golden Valley-157-96-2833H-3, 

FridayJanuary 5, 2024: 2 for the month; 2 for the quarter, 2 for the year
None.

ThursdayJanuary 4, 2024: 2 for the month; 2 for the quarter, 2 for the year
None.

RBN ENERGY: Trinity constructing first greenfield gas storage project in many years.

We’ve been saying for a while now that the natural gas storage market may be on the verge of a comeback. At the same time, we’ve cautioned that the world has changed since the heyday of gas storage in the mid-to-late 2000s, and that while market participants are clamoring for storage solutions and storage values are rising, what’s driving storage values today is vastly different than what drove the last big capacity build-out (which resulted in a major storage overbuild). 

As a result, only a handful of storage projects meeting special needs in particular places are likely to reach a final investment decision (FID). In today’s RBN blog, we discuss one such project: a greenfield storage facility under construction at two depleted dry-gas reservoirs 90 miles southeast of Dallas.

In our Squeezebox blog series a few months ago, we took an in-depth look at the changing role and value of natural gas storage over the past several decades — before and after the deregulation and unbundling of the gas market in the early 1990s, then (in the mid-to-late 2000s) the advent of market-based storage rates and plans for LNG imports, and (through the mid-to-late 2010s) the Shale Era’s gas-supply abundance, which (combined with the storage overbuild) led to declining storage values and a virtual halt in the development of new storage capacity. That brings us to what we see as a potential revival of the storage market — and why we think it will look different than storage market cycles in the past. For one thing, today’s demand for storage is being driven largely by extrinsic economics, not intrinsic values.

More: 

Here’s the bottom line: Storage is no longer valued for the capacity alone but is increasingly valued for its role in providing volume assurance and the opportunities created by high deliverability. However, that doesn’t necessarily mean storage values will be high enough to support the large-scale build-out of new facilities. Instead, the development of new storage capacity is likely to be very targeted — it will happen only where it clearly makes economic sense.

Figure 1 - Trinity Gas Storage and Nearby Pipelines

Figure 1. Trinity Gas Storage and Nearby Pipelines. Source: RBN

All of which brings us to the focus of today’s blog: Trinity Gas Storage’s greenfield gas storage project. Located in Bethel, TX — and adjacent to system storage for nearby Atmos Energy and Energy Transfer pipelines — the Trinity project is utilizing two largely depleted gas reservoirs as a “warehouse” in which customers will inject/withdraw natural gas. The facility’s Phase I, slated for commercial startup in Q2 2024, will provide about 24 Bcf of capacity and marketed deliverability of at least 0.46 Bcf — it also will be able to deliver up to 0.75 Bcf on a day when demand for stored gas is unusually high. (Deliverability is the volume of gas that can be withdrawn from storage in a 24-hour period.) A second phase of up to 26 Bcf of capacity and marketed deliverability numbers close to those in Phase I is in an advanced stage of development, with Trinity launching its marketing for Phase II this month and anticipating commissioning as soon as Q2 2025.

Before we dive into the details of the project — and the rationale for it — we should note that Trinity's executive team has extensive experience in depleted-reservoir gas storage projects, having been involved in (among other things) the greenfield development of the 18.5-Bcf Caledonia Energy Partners project in northeastern Mississippi in the late 1990s and early 2000s and the management and operation of the 36-Bcf NorTex storage facility (formerly known as Falcon Gas Storage) west of Dallas/Fort Worth.

Phase I of the Trinity project in East Texas, which achieved a positive FID in September 2023 and has secured $190 million in financing, involves the conversion of part of a nearly depleted reservoir that has been producing dry natural gas since the early days of the Eisenhower administration. (For our younger readers, that was 70-plus years ago.) Work on the Texas Railroad Commission-approved project is underway and is slated for completion and initial operation in Q3 2024.

Bethel, Texas, is two hours southeast of our little hovel in Euless, Texas. Who-hoo. 

Saudi Foreign Exchange Reserves Posted — November, 2023

Locator: 46463SAUDI. Posted January 5, 2024.

Saudi Arabia foreign exchange reserves: posted overnight. Link here.

Coldest January Temperatures In 25 Years — January 5, 2024

Locator: 46462GLOBALWARMING. 

We’re toasty warm in Texas so I was completely unaware how cold it is this winter in Gretaland. From Bloomberg:

The deep freeze gripping Europe’s northernmost region is edging south, paralyzing transport systems and pushing power prices to records. The icy conditions, producing the coldest January temperatures for 25 years in parts of Sweden, will spread to Nordic capitals over the weekend. The cold snap will also sweep across other parts of western Europe over the coming week, with Berlin sinking to as low as -8C (17.6F) by Tuesday, while Paris will be -4C on Wednesday, according to forecaster Maxar Technologies Inc.

Zero Hedge And The Bakken — January 4, 2024

Locator: 46461B.


A sampling:
Right now, an able-bodied unskilled laborer willing to learn and capable of working long and hard can still land a $115,000 entry-level job with room and board and nearly five months off on an oil rig site or with a growing number of independent contractors and start-up oilfield service companies in western North Dakota.

Right now, the Bakken is where stories like Mr. McConnell’s aren’t stories but invitations. It’s where an Arizona cosmetologist can monitor a rig gate while looking to buy her first home, where a New Jersey geologist can build a company that employs 300 to revive a community where she’s hailed as a hometown hero, where a “disgruntled” airman from Cincinnati can carve a niche and expand it into a broadening entrepreneurial enterprise.

“The rush is over, and now we’re seeing a maturing of the play,” said Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.), a 1998 graduate of Dickinson High School who recalls having to—and being able to—stand in the middle of highways to get cellphone reception before the oil boom.

As is typical with a “maturing of the play,” most corporate players have moved on. In their wake, new players have emerged: first-time independent contractors and serial entrepreneurs, many under 40, most building local businesses, buying homes, starting families, and growing communities.

For them, fast money is fine, but sustainable “systemic growth” is preferable, with perfected-in-North-Dakota advances in fracking spurring pioneering innovations in lateral drilling.