This only perpetuates the perception that EVs are a play thing for the well-off, that they are luxury vehicles for the rich subsidized by losers (as defined by Trump). And, of course, the richest man in the world only drives Teslas. LOL.
I have little enthusiasm for such headlines.
************************************ Furball
Get ready for the furball of the century pitting CVX against XOM and / or CNOOC for Hess’ stake in Guyana’s giant oil field.
Since the first US manned lunar landing in 1969, not one US manned lander landed on its side.
2024 - 1969: 55 years. The first American lunar (unmanned) lander, in 55 years, landed on its site and will transmit data for less than 72 (?) hours.
We've come a long way in 55 years.
What was Joe Biden doing in 1969?
Now, Biden's most recent "achievement"? Putting LNG export facilities on "pause" because someone convinced him coal is cleaner than the natural gas these end users would have burned instead. I can't make this stuff up. Meanwhile, Qatar is using the opportunity to overtake the US again in LNG export. And reliability.
Back to "Putting LNG export facilities on "pause" because someone convinced him
coal is cleaner than the natural gas these end users would have burned
instead." Exhibit A:
DFW: record temp today, 94°. Normal high is 63° for February 26. Previous record high 90°. Record high forecast again for tomorrow.
Medical school, link here. I wonder if folks see the most interesting "thing" about this announcement:
Let's do the math.
assume tuition = $100,000 / year
400 students across all four classes: $100,000 / yr / student x 400 students = $40 million / year
$1 billion x 0.04 = $40 million / year
But that's not the most interesting data point. There's yet another interesting data point.Remember, a one-time donation of $1 billion will cover "free tuition in perpetuity for all medical students" at this medical school.
And if folks don't see the most interesting data point, it speaks volumes about "money knowledge" of Americans.
CVX - Hess: the deal is not dead and there's much, much more to be sorted out and potentially re-negotiated, but the leaves in my St Patrick tea cup suggest this deal is dead. This will be a huge story tomorrow with stories everywhere and links not necessary. For some investors, this is not necessarily a bad-news story. One word: furball.
Shutdown: I thought we were past this but apparently not. "Biden calls leaders to White House as shutdown looms." -- Barron's. Deadline: Friday, March 1, 2024. To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, "here we go again."
***************************** Back to the Bakken
WTI: $77.62.
Active rigs: 38.
Two new permits, #40543 and #40544:
Operator: EOG
Field: Parshall (Mountrail)
Comments:
EOG has permits for two Wayzetta wells, SENE 13-153-90,
to be sited 2360 FNL and 475 FEL; and, at 2360 FNL and 435 FEL.
The Wayzetta wells are tracked here, but have not been updated in a long time.
Existing, producing well in that section:
17083, 956, EOG, Waayzetta 1-13H, Parshall, t9/08; cum 485K 12/23;
One of the two new permits, the other one will be on the same pad and same drilling unit:
The data years: The authors conducted a retrospective analysis of (a)
female breast cancer mortality rates from NCHS data for
1969–2017 for all...
Results:
between 1989 and 2010, breast cancer mortality rates decreased by
1.5%–3.4% per year for each age decade from 20 to
79 years...
after 2010, breast cancer mortality rates
continued to decline by 1.2%–2.2% per year in
women in each age decade from 40 to 79 years but stopped declining in women younger than 40 years.
The chart at the top of the page at this linkhas an anomalous data point, undated (?) but most recent data is through calendar year 2020 which suggests same data base as the Radiology link above.
If I'm reading the chart correctly:
An observation: for all the billions spent on research, the observed death rate in the past ten years, 2009 - 2019, not encouraging. Yes, the drop from 22.2 to 19.4 looks great statistically but to the individual patient, no change in observed death rate in the past ten years
Comment: like everything else in human endeavor, I assume there's a lot of "group think" in research labs around the world. One wonders if some out-of-the-box thinking might be indicated. And perhaps there has been; I certainly don't know. I don't follow breast cancer except for occasionally looking at the statistics. But these statistics are depressing. Maybe I'm being too negative.
Comment: we won't know until 2024 or 2025 but the statistics will be very, very interesting for the calendar years 2020 and 2021 when Covid interrupted outpatient visits when early diagnosis might have been made and for many cancer therapy might have been interrupted. Again, the best study, the Radiology study covered breast cancer data from 1969 to 2017, well before 2021 - 2023.
Unity Software (U): sometimes one just gets lucky. There were a lot of folks recommending U this past year, and I almost put a sizeable amount in this company as an investment. But I only had "room" for five or six tech companies and U did not make the cut. Wow, U is a mess. It recently announced a 25% cut in its workforce, almost unheard of in the tech sector. And it appears no one knows what is going on.
Electricity bill: this is our sole energy cost (other than gasoline for the cars) for our carbon dioxide emission footprint -- we have only electricity, no natural gas or anything else. Our electricity is almost 100% wind, solar according to the utility.
Our stated rate: 580 kWh @ $0.155499/kWh. The additional charge, 2.0% sales tax and a strange tax I don't understand, $1.84 and $1.80, respectively.
$3 / day -- about the cost of a visit to a local Starbucks, something I haven't done in months, probably coming up on six months now?
****************************** Personal Note
I recently received a note via "Messenger" from an old Bitburg, Germany, friend who said she had not heard from me "any more."
My reply:
I have no less than 100 journals -- none of which are accessible to any other person, but will be left for Sophia when I die. I continue to journal, and am gradually moving them to the web.
In addition, I have no less than 20 blogs, again, most inaccessible to any other individual. All password protected, and likewise, the password and URLs will be left with Sophia and my executor(s) when I die.
But I'm thinking of a weekly post on the "The Million Dollar Way" blog -- my primary blog -- that would be entirely personal -- as a method of letting old friends and acquaintances keep up with what I'm doing. It's a selfish indulgence and something I prefer not to do, but maybe. We'll see. Another blog is not an option.
On another note, my workhorse is an old Intel-based MacBook Air, a 2018 model bought in 2018. It's an incredible laptop but some of the keyboard keys are getting a bit sticky. Slows me down.
I've had a backup 2000 M1 MacBook Air bought in 2000 but seldom used -- I've been keeping it as a backup and keeping it in pristine condition. If my old Intel-based MacBook Air has 10,950 hours on it, the M1 has less than a hundred hours. I'm using it now, out by the pool. It's going to get up to 93°F later this afternoon. It's doesn't feel that hot today; I've become way too acclimated to hot temperatures.
All of that to say this: the macOS is Sonoma 14.1.2, 8GB. It is absolutely incredible. It will last another ten years, I assume, but am eagerly waiting for the M3 MacBook Air likely to be released this summer. Yeah, I'll get the entry model if it's released. No reason, except for the experience of the M3.
I can no longer recommend AAPL as an investment but wow, I have nothing but great things to say about Apple's products, services, operating niche. On the deck with me today, the laptop, an iPad, and an iPhone, all working seamlessly. Earphones?
************************** The New Yorker Editor Must Have Stopped By Last Month
Severe. Words seem to mean less and less the older I get.
For wearing a single unapproved glove in qualifying rounds, his penalty would be to start at the back of the pack and start one lap down. In other words, he has to lap the entire field just to get back on the lead lap, and then he would still be in very last place.
Wow, that was fast. Here in the US, we would still be "doing" the environmental impact statement and deferring to indigenous sovereign nations on whether we can go forward. Some hyperbole but not much.
A reminder:
Warren Buffett famously sold TSM because it was located in Taiwan;
then Buffett famously invested a huge amount of money in five Japanese companies
a bit of irony there
See this post. This post is simply one of the best analyses done on the Buffett-TSM story. A must-read.
Today:
******************** Josh's Pick
McDonald's.
It's in my "bucket list." Pays 2.24%.
The technicals are incredible. May have to come back to this later.
One thing he didn't mention: Uber. People have no problem paying a premium for home delivery.
The basic reproduction number, R nought (R0), is defined as the average number of secondary cases of an infectious disease arising from a typical case in a totally susceptible population, and can be estimated in populations if pre-existing immunity can be accounted for in the calculation.
R0
determines the herd immunity threshold and therefore the immunisation
coverage required to achieve elimination of an infectious disease.
As
R0 increases, higher immunisation coverage is required to achieve herd
immunity. In July, 2010, a panel of experts convened by WHO concluded
that measles can and should be eradicated. Despite the existence of an
effective vaccine, regions have had varying success in measles control,
in part because measles is one of the most contagious infections.
For
measles, R0 is often cited to be 12–18, which means that each person
with measles would, on average, infect 12–18 other people in a totally
susceptible population ... We calculated median measles R0 values stratified by key covariates. We found that R0 estimates vary more than the often cited range of 12–18.
R0, various sources, generally accepted:
measles: 12 - 18
chickenpox: 10 - 12
seasonal flu (influenza, e.g., H1N1): 2 - 3
Ebola: 1.7 - 2.0
Chinese flu: 1.2
Apparently the Florida SG didn't get the memo. He will let parents decide. Public Health no longer matters.
In the big scheme of things, measles is so much worse than Covid, so much worse, on so many levels.
Before we get started, over the weekend, I made one huge prediction to a reader in a sidebar (see comments on the blog): cars are going to get a lot less expensive this summer. Just one prediction all weekend, LOL, and that was it.
This morning, his headline: Jeep lowers prices for more sales. Link here.
My theme: even the rich don't like EVs, and that's really, really bad news for those trying to sell them
those reasons that folks aren't buying EVs -- they're all excuses by EV advocates
few automobile manufacturers are willing to admit the obvious:
this is not an excuse, this is the reason why EVs are not selling: Americans don't want to buy EVs
it has nothing to do with cost, range anxiety, infrastructure. They're all part of the equation and Americans will mention any number of them as "reasons" not to buy an EV, but at the end of they, "they simply don't want to be tethered."
Today's headlines:
BYD: announces a new $233,450 EV Supercar to rival Ferrari, Lamborghini
Lamborghini: surging; up another 1% today; at all-time highs; and I put Ferrari (RACE) on my bucket list about a year ago and have been accumulating shares, though will probably hold off for now
once I wake up, we'll add Part 2 -- it looks like this is turning out to be a huge story
NATO: Sweden's in. Next: Ukraine.
Iran: has reduced its stockpile of near-weapons-grade nuclear material over the past 3.5 months, defying expectations. Received no headlines in the news.
PCE: link here. Even if accurate, won't matter. Won't change JPow's mind.
**************************** Back to the Bakken
WTI: $76.79.
Tuesday, February 27, 2024: 63 for the month; 122 for the quarter, 122 for the year 37487, conf, CLR, Gibb 4-24H1,
Monday, February 26, 2024: 62 for the month; 121 for the quarter, 121 for the year 39616, conf, Whiting, DE YK 12-33-2TFH, 37486, conf, CLR, Gibb 3-24H,
Sunday, February 25, 2024: 60 for the month; 119 for the quarter, 119 for the year 38641, conf, Hess, GO-Knudson-156-97-2017H-3, 37485, conf, CLR, Gibb 2-24H1,
Saturday, February 24, 2024: 58 for the month; 117 for the quarter, 117 for the yea 39617, conf, Whiting, DE YK 12-33-2H, 39340, conf, Enerplus, Cushion 148-93-04A-09H-LL, 37343, conf, Whiting, Bigfoot LS 23-22 8H,
Way back in 2018-19, U.S. NGL production was rising fast, new
ethane-only steam crackers were coming online along the Gulf Coast, and
new fractionation capacity wasn’t being added quickly enough — the
capacity shortfall sent the NGL market into near-panic. Fast forward to
now: NGL production is still rising but domestic demand is flat,
resulting in an NGL-exports surge and a race to develop new export
capacity. And fractionation capacity in Mont Belvieu and elsewhere? The
market learned its lesson five years ago and, to avert another capacity
crunch, midstream companies have been adding new fractionators at an
almost frenetic pace. In today’s RBN blog, we discuss the ongoing
fractionation-capacity buildout — and the need to quickly expand NGL
export terminals.
Having sufficient infrastructure in place is, of course, a critical
need in each and every U.S. hydrocarbon market. There’s no way around it
— you need the processing plants, the pipelines, the storage, and
(especially in the Shale Era) the export docks to deal with the massive
volumes of crude oil, natural gas and NGLs being produced. And don’t
forget to build in a cushion, not just to deal with the daily and weekly
ups and downs in supply and demand, but also to anticipate production
growth.