Friday, April 5, 2024

Essay On US Production -- Export -- Crude Oil -- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46929WTI.

Link here.

The whole essay is awesome but this paragraph is particularly interesting:

The EIA analysis noted that following nearly 40 years of annual production declines, in 2009, U.S. crude oil production experienced a resurgence, attributed to the widespread adoption of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling techniques by producers. Since then, production has continued to climb steadily.

The only interruption to this growth occurred in 2020 and 2021, when demand and prices plummeted due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Notably, recent increases in total crude oil and natural gas production in the United States have been primarily driven by the growth of production in the Permian Basin, located in western Texas and eastern New Mexico.

Time to review "Hubbert Peak Theory." The fact that the expert did not mention Hubbert Peak Theory suggests that "everybody knows.

Week 14: April 1, 2024 -- April 7, 2024

Locator: 46928TOPSTORIES.

Top story:

  • US economy hitting on all cylinders

Top international non-energy story:

  • US intel: Iran plans to hit Israel before the end of next week
  • Israel withdraws "completely" from south Gaza; abrupt decision, it appears

Top international energy story:


Top national non-energy story:


Top national energy story:

  • WTI trends toward $87;

Focus on fracking: link here.

Top North Dakota non-energy story:


Top North Dakota energy story:


Geoff Simon's quick connects: link here.

Seven New Permits -- Friday -- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46927B.

Mergers, acquisitions: in my experience, the majority of acquisitions, mergers are initiated / completed because one or both of the companies are in deep trouble. Keep that in mind while thinking about the Chesapeake-Southwester proposed merger; the US regulator trying to de-rail it; and, the Permian natural gas graphic below. I think it's a hoot. Texas is going to win again. 

For the archives, link here:

A question Bakken operators must be asking themselves: what's all the excitement about Guyana all about? The Guyana play is estimated to hold 11 billions of crude oil -- estimated -- whereas the Bakken has already produced nearly five billion bbls. And assuming the world needs it, it will eventually produce upwards of 50 billion bbls and that may be on the low end.  And, again, assuming the world needs it, the Bakken will still be producing in 2300.

NOVI, Ted Cross, natural gas production in the Permian: link here

Commentary: There is just so much information out that -- it's amazing. 

I started following the Bakken revolution simply because I found it so fascinating, didn't know a thing about it and wanted to learn. But, I've moved on, and now, I continue to follow the Bakken revolution (and post about it) for these reasons, and their relative weights:

  • 10%: still learning about the Bakken revolution, intellectual curiosity, simply want to learn for learning's sake;
  • 20%: urge to write; to satisfy my journalistic drive; but it had to be in an area that might have some value added for intended audience;
  • 5%: to help me with my own investing;
  • 65%: if I quit even for a day, I will fall so far behind it will be hard to get caught up;

I don't blog about the Bakken to help me with investing, except as noted at 5% perhaps, but blogging has made me a much better investor, although I can't quantify that.

I guess the real reason: I don't golf and in retirement I need a hobby.

WTI breakevens: The other day, a talking head on CNBC made a comment in passing about the breakeven for US WTI: it's $35 for existing wells in the Permian. Here's one source for that comment.

Production, projection: will recent Permian well performance drops hold up as wells get older? Based on previous well history, the answer is yes. Link here.

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Back to the Bakken

 WTI: $86.91.

Active rigs: 34.

Seven new permits, #40644 - #40650, inclusive:
  • Operators: SOGC (Sinclair) (5); EOG (2)
  • Fields: Lone Butte (McKenzie); Parshall (Mountrail)
  • Comments:
    • SOGC has permits for five Dry Creek Federal wells, NESW 13-147-98, 
      • to be sited between 1715 FSL and 1846 FSL and between 2285 FWL and 2410 FWL;
    • EOG has permits for two Apricot wells; 
      • #40644 will be sited 1915 FNL aand 1100 FWL; and#40645 will be sited 1915 FNL and 1140 FWL

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The Book Page

Along with Hunter S Thompson, Graham Greene, and a few others, perhaps Goethe comes to mind, Lord Byron has always fascinated me. Maybe this week, I finally "understand" him. Just arrived, Byron: A Life in Ten Letters, by Andrew Stauffer, published February 22, 2024! Cambridge University Press. Looks awesome.

All of them, 'cepting HST as far as I can tell, had interesting relationships with women. Graham Greene's  was well described by his biographer. Byron's was well known to all -- or at least we all have our own myth of Bryon. Wilhelm Goethe, as far as I know -- one needs to read all one can about Goethe, then read between the lines, imagine what was unsaid / unwritten, and then fill in one's own imagined details. 

My hunch is at the end of the day, I won't know any more about Byron than I already know, but it should be a great read nonetheless. It looks like a book one can read during during unexpected quiet moments. Reading one essay at time whenever one wants and not necessarily in any particular order. We'll see.

If Charles Kennedy Posts It, You Know It's Going To Be Actionable And Important -- But Sometimes One Needs To Read Between The Lines -- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46926WTI.

First thing I noticed when I opened the laptop after going out to the Bat Cave: WTI trending towards $87.

OMG.

What's going on?

Link here.


But also, the jobs report today. The US economy. All pushing oil higher. And this is despite a much stronger dollar. And the EV implosion. It's all "back to the future" with regard to oil.

My favorite quote from former President Trump:

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Today's Lunch

The Scarabus collection, link here. Wiki. For me, the real Scotch aficionado prefers a peaty Scotch, which means Islay.



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Today's Video

Link here.

Fracking? April 5, 2024

Locator: 46925EARTHQUAKE.

I guess they've begun fracking in the Northeast.

Link here.


 

It's Not The Magnificent Seven -- Or Tech -- That's Leading The Market -- So, Where Are The Returns This Year? April 5, 2024

Locator: 46924INV.

From CNBC, the ETF standouts "this year":


 Energy: up 16%, but some folks still prefer MMFs.

I believe this "16%" is ticker / price appreciation only and does not account for dividends paid.

  • CHRD pays 5.7%;
  • ENB, pays 7.6%
  • EPD pays 7%

And if one doesn't "spend" those dividends but re-invest in other sectors .... well, what can I say.

#2 ticker this week: MPC. Whoo-hoo!

Household Mirrors With Heads-Up Displays -- The Next Big Thing -- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46923NBT.

"Next Big Thing" -- linked at the sidebar to the right.

It's going to take awhile but changes in household tech will be incredible.

I'm not convinced Apple household robots will go anywhere. We'll see.

However, the next big thing? Bathroom mirrors with "heads-up” displays. Currently in tech commercial.

By the way, speaking of "the next big thing," Netflix is trending toward a 52-week high, and though it's below its all-time high, it's in the ballpark. It's "ironic" that my first mention of Netflix on the blog was "the next big thing" eleven years ago.  But look at all the other stuff in that first post. LOL.

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Flashback -- My Very First "Next Big Thing" Post
Original Post Eleven (11) Years Ago

Original Post 
First Posted March 21, 2013

I think everyone enjoys trying to predict the "next big thing." Or at least "a" next big thing.

I was reminded of that at your school's book fair earlier this afternoon. I happened to see "Lego Crazy Action Contraptions" by Klutz.

Thirty years ago I started a Lego collection that eventually took on a life of its own. Our older daughter never enjoyed Legos. Our younger daughter loves them as much today as she did then. For awhile, it looked like Lego might not survive (maybe ten, fifteen years ago). And then, with some incredible marketing efforts the company has thrived. Klutz's "Lego Crazy Action Contraptions" was another reminder of folks thinking outside the box.

At the book fair, I saw that Skippyjon Jones has a new book, Cirque de Ole. I happened to run across Skippyjon Jones some years ago, when it first came out, and could tell it was going to be huge, and it appears that it has. Good for Judy Schachner.

Years ago, before it was available, I saw a story in some now-defunct news magazine and told my wife that the "PT Cruiser" would be a huge hit. And it was.

Likewise, before the first episode of "30 Rock" aired, I knew that Tina Fey would be big; I just never imagined that BIG. I didn't think the show would do all that well (I was wrong) but that Tina Fey would do well.

I knew the iPad was going to be huge; I don't recall thinking much about the iPhone, but I knew the iPad had more uses than skeptics realized. The iPad has yet to live up to its potential but that's just a matter of time.  (I knew the "netbook" was doomed the minute I saw it. I think the "Surface" is likewise doomed.)

Back in 2007, when I started the milliondollarway blog, I knew the Bakken was going to be big. I didn't think it would be that BIG, but for North Dakota, I thought it would rank right up there with the last boom. Wow, was I wrong. The Bakken is much bigger than I ever imagined.

By the way, I deleted that first blog in a fit of insanity one night, and then started all over. I think the current milliondollarway blog dates back to 2009. I could be wrong. Haven't checked lately.

With regard to the Bakken, the biggest surprise: multi-well pads and rail.

My son-in-law thinks Vudu will be the next big thing. Perhaps in time. But not for awhile. Our discussion began with Apple and iTV. I suggested that "it" was all about "content," and, of course, that brought us to Netflix, Vudu, and Hulu. Vudu and Hulu have access to new movies sooner than Netflix. Yet Netflix is still well ahead of anyone else in that sector.

That made me question my assumption that "it" was all about "content." I think I'm wrong. "Content" is important, but within a month of release, new movies are available everywhere, so "content" alone is not the discriminator. "Content" is quickly becoming a commodity (with notable exceptions: NFL network, "made-for-Netflix" movies, as prime examples). Once "content" is a commodity, then something else drives the sector.

So, if it's not "content," what is it? "Accessibility." Accessibility includes "ease" of accessibility. All demographics can reach Netflix. Even my parents, well into their 80's and 90's can use snail mail to order Netflix DVDs, but unless it has to do with fishing, my dad would have no idea what "streaming" is,  much less be able to access it.

So, we'll see. For $7.99/month I have unlimited and "easy" access to Netflix; for $5.99 I can stream one movie from Vudu or pay "Target-" or "Wal-Mart-price" for the DVD itself. US mail and $7.99 / month / unlimited still beats the alternative. So we'll see. Vudu might be the next big thing but I don't see that for a few years. At least. [Vudu is now known as Fandango At Home, link here.]

Back packs will become "a" next big thing. They already are in urban settings, not so much in rural areas.

I think LNG corridors will be "a" next big thing.

I think Facebook will surprise us; it will be "a" next big thing but only after it evolves to the next level to include a) gaming; b) better search; c) a music module; d) a YouTube-like video module; and, e) easier "home page" development.

All-electric vehicles as family cars are "dead." Hybrids aren't dead but it will be a long, steady slog for them to become mainstream. [This was written in 2013.]

Free wi-fi everywhere is just a matter of time. I don't know if one would call "free wi-fi everywhere" "a next big thing" but within a few years coffee shops won't stay in business if they don't offer free wi-fi. I do think that someone could yet come up with with a Barnes and Noble bookstore-coffee shop-internet cafe business plan that would work.  Except for college-centric Starbucks, most Starbucks coffee shops are pretty quiet after 6:00 p.m. Just the opposite for most retail when they are very, very quiet before 10:00 am.

That brings us to a "cashless" society. Cyprus may be a "cashless" society by next Monday. Apple stores are cashless [update, April 16, 2015: according to Apple employee this past week, Apple retail stores will take cash]. I do think someone big is going to go cashless and that will change everything. Could Wal-Mart go cashless?  For those who don't have a credit card, or some type of mobile payment (SmartPhone, for example), they pay for a company cash card at customer service when they come in the door. 

Jobs -- Say What You Want, But This Suggests Surging US Economy And Force Participation Suggests Wage Inflation Not An Issue -- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46922ECONOMY.

Updates

April 5, 2024: others are suggesting something else. Does part-time vs full-time jobs matter? If accurate, a very, very interesting data point.

April 5, 2024: the jobs report does one thing -- puts a final nail in that coffin burying all that talk about a recession. 

I would go one step further -- it will put a nail in that coffin burying all that talk about "stagflation."Call it what you want. If you want to call it stagflation, go ahead. But for me, as an exuberant American citizen and an exuberant investor, I'll take MPC up $4 / up 2% regardless what folks want to call it.

April 5, 2024: at mid-day, Dow is up 400 points after the jobs report. 

One could argue that traders have given up on waiting for a Fed cut. The jobs report shows an incredibly resilient economy with no evidence of wage inflation. With regard to the market, two things going on:

  • good companies aren't waiting around for the Fed to do something; they're executing their plans; and,
  • mom-and-pop retailers are taking advantage of market pullbacks to buy more underpriced shares

Original Post

Bottom line: US economy is growing strongly but it won't be the "kind" of growth that causes inflation, for two reasons:

  • supply chain problems resolved; exhibit A: price of new cars;
    • don't take this out of context; it doesn't mean prices will drop; it doesn't mean that housewives will be surprised how inexpensive it it is to go grocery shopping; it simply means prices won't grow as much as they did during the pandemic -- which is still fresh in everyone's mind
  • wage growth held in check by immigration surge (this tells me again, White House knows more than we do); labor force participation has actually increased;

BLS: link here

DJIA: after much-anticipated jobs report, DJIA opens up 38 points; muted response. 

Next: Cramer very subdued; concerned about Mideast.

Autos: back to normal; supply chain fixed; new car prices coming down quickly.

  • used car prices came down significantly a few months ago

Analysts' summary:

  • great numbers; surprising numbers;
  • folks under-estimating positive effect of immigration;
  • no signs of worrisome wage inflation; immigrants stepping into take jobs otherwise hard to fill;
  • consumers feel very well off; spending; the word "resilient" not used by any analyst but obviously there
  • but look at that: analysts missed estimates by 50% -- how can they be so far off
  • expected: 200,000 new jobs
  • actual: 300,000 new jobs

Jobs report and market reaction: link here.

  • expectation: +213,000 jobs
  • expectation: fewer than the 275,000 new jobs in February 
  • numbers better than expected; making Fed decision more difficult
  • unemployment: 3.8%; down from 3.9% last month; this was quite a surprise
  • a whopping increase of 303,000 jobs
  • wages: right in line 
  • force participation up
  • Treasuries jump
  • force participation: increases which is a huge deal; 
    • Steve Liesman suggests this may be the big stroy of the day
    • Rick: says we've been here before and not quite as exuberant
  • working from home? can now hold two jobs
  • other analysts
    • 1 - big number, huge number, but not inflationary
      • 1 - is immigration playing a role filling some of these jobs
      • 1 -data won't help Fed make decision
    • 2 - economy being powered by two things
      • fiscal policy
      • immigration
        • huge reason for all the good news regarding economy and 
        • higher for longer; no longer anyone should think about 2 rate cuts
    • 2 - we need to see continued CPI progress, blah, blah, blah
    • 3 - no rate cut any time soon
    • 3 - great numbers; economy doing very, very well
    • 3 - economy being led by consumer; consumer continuing to spend
      • leisure and hospitality continues to lead which is great
      • earnings will continue to be good
      • market will go higher: financials, energy, infrastructure, not tech
      • remains a buyer

Before release of data:

  • DJIA: +100 before release of data

Immediately after release of data:

  • DJIA: +45

After time to digest:

  • DIJA: +120

Dallas Fed President: teases no rate cuts this year, and possibly even a rate increase -- CNBC, 10:03 a.m. CDT, April 5, 2024. Liesman considers her the most influential, after JPow, of course. She is generally dovish, but becoming concerned how fast the economy is growing. Remember, she's from Texas, where economy is surging. 

TGIF --- April 5, 2024

Locator: 46921ECONOMY.

Jobs report and market reaction: more analysis here.

  • expectation: +213,000 jobs
  • expectation: fewer than the 275,000 new jobs in February
  • unemployment: 3.8%; down from 3.9% last month; this was quite a surprise
  • a whopping increase of 303,000 jobs
  • wages: right in line 
  • force participation up
  • Treasuries jump

ABBV: huge drop yesterday. Down over 5%. Cutting earnings estimates.

PARA: sank 8% after rallying double digits the day prior. All about Skydance Media.

Copper's comeback: Bloomberg

EVs: Kia cuts global EV demand forecast for 24 / 25. Link here.

  • crude oil surging; US economy doing great; US household net worth up significantly
  • EV prices coming down
  • and yet EV excitement has peaked
  • Ford to significantly delay EV transition
  • everything suggests this is a watershed moment for EVs

Personal investing: add to VZ position today, by rule. Consider adding SCCO. No recommendation. See disclaimer. 

California budget: link here.

  • deficit, $38 billion, buried deep in article
  • first cut: $17 billion from the state budget, deal reach in April (in the past few days)
  • $1 billion delay in transit and intercity rail projects (bullet train?)
  • $763 million pause in hiring open state jobs
  • $500 million pulled back from a program to help districts pay for K-12 building projects
  • well, that adds up to less than $3 billion in a $38 billion shortfall
  • what we're not being told: how budget deficit affects plan to expand Medi-Cal to all low-income immigrants -- my hunch -- that's where the big expenses will be -- in Medi-Cal and similar programs
  • so, so far:
  • pause in state hiring; pause in building a few new schools; and, delay in public transportation projects

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Back to the Bakken

WTI: $86.62.

Sunday, April 7, 2024: 8 for the month; 8 for the quarter, 207 for the year
39784, conf, CLR, Thorvald 8-6HSL,

Saturday, April 6, 2024: 7 for the month; 7 for the quarter, 206 for the year
38973, conf, SOGC, Harris Federal 3-31H,

Friday, April 5, 2024: 6 for the month; 6 for the quarter, 205 for the year
37571, conf, CLR, Cuskelly 6-7H,

RBN Energy: most E&P 2023 profits dip to solid levels after record 2022 but gas producers struggle.

U.S. E&Ps have just concluded discussions of their Q4 and full-year 2023 results and, as usual, the view of analysts and investors can be summed up by one question: What have you done for me lately? But while the collective results of the 44 producers we track were off from the previous quarter and a record 2022, there’s a lot to be said for how well they held up through a period of unusually low natural gas prices. In fact, if you take a step or two back for a longer-term perspective you’d see a strong historical performance that suggests E&Ps really have learned how to do well through commodity price ups and downs. In today’s RBN blog, we analyze the 2023 results of a representative group of major U.S. producers and look ahead to how 2024 may shake out.