Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Taco Tuesday -- And In A Very Good Way --US Equity Markets Surge -- Inflation Report Tame -- August 12, 2025

Locator: 48830B. 

Tariffs on China extended 90 days; meeting with Intel CEO: Trump doing an incredibly better job than the Fed in managing the dual mandate. LOL. 

Trump is not afraid to shift course when the data changes. And he "turns on a dime," as they say. The Fed? Since January, nine months ago, they've been waiting for new data.

NVDA, AMD: willing to pay entire tariff costs. Headline news at first with folks questioning legality; today? Crickets. Waiting for Judge Boasberg. 

US equity markets surge.

Inflation: what inflation? It was all "used cars" and "rent." 

Literally nothing showing up as a result of tariffs. Sara Eisen noted a slight increase in the price of tomatoes in her long interview with White House spokesman.
We finally understand the reason for the inflation due to "used cars" and "rent." Even as new McMansions sort of flat-lined, "rent" has been the real problem. "Shelter" inflation due to "rent" and not "McMansions" is a huge, huge clue of what's going on / what went on. Same with "used cars" vs "new cars."
No matter how The NYT tries to spin it .... link here.
Also, "electricity costs" increasing. Supports my argument.

Oil, gas: doing its part to keep inflation down. Imagine WTI at $80 and $5.00-gasoline under Joe Bide. 

Real reason for surging US equity markets? Taylor Swift announces release of new album; just in time for summer blowout.

***********************************
Back to the Bakken

WTI: $63.57. Trending toward $60.

New wells:

  • Wednesday, August 13, 2025: 26 for the month, 74 for the quarter, 504 for the year,
    • 40449, conf, Empire North Dakota LLC, Eagle 29 1,
  • Tuesday, August 12, 2025: 25 for the month, 73 for the quarter, 503 for the year, 
    • 41272, conf, CLR, HM Hove 8-9H,

RNB Energy: tech giants may be the surest bets for data center power demand. Archived.

Data centers are a buzzy topic in the energy industry, and while there is still a lot of fuzziness about what will actually get built and how much natural-gas-fired power will be needed to support these projects, there’s no doubt that major technology companies are well along in planning a number of massive data centers across the country. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll offer a snapshot of the plans announced by tech giants Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet (Google) and Meta (Facebook). 

As we’ve discussed in several blogs over the past few months (see Options Open and We Should Be Friends), the race to site, build and open data centers to support artificial intelligence (AI), cloud services and other high-tech needs is fierce. It’s rife with hopes and expectations that are unlikely to be fully realized, and there are a lot of proposed projects that may or may not get built. To help separate the signal from the noise, we thought it would be best to look at what’s being proposed by four large mega-tech companies that have proven they have the financial and organizational wherewithal to make big things happen.

Proposed Data Centers for Technology Giants

Figure 1. Proposed Data Centers for Technology Giants. Source: RBN

Here is a roundup of major data center projects by the four tech giants noted earlier that have been started or proposed, as shown in Figure 1 above.

Microsoft

Microsoft has added more than 2 gigawatts (GW) of data center capacity in the past 12 months and has more than 400 data centers across 70 regions globally, the company said in its July 30 earnings announcement. The company set aside $80 billion for data centers in fiscal year 2025, with more than $40 billion earmarked for the U.S. Microsoft opened its first data center on its Redmond, WA, campus in 1989 — the year Taylor Swift was born (and the title of one of her most popular albums: 1989.) In April, Microsoft paused some of its data center construction, including a $1 billion project in Ohio, and slowed projects in Wisconsin. Despite these pauses, Microsoft executives said they’re committed to spending on projects this year.