Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Ovintiv Ramps Up Montney Exposure with Acquisition of NuVista Energy -- RBN Energy -- November 18, 2025

Locator: 49738OVINTIV.

The Montney is tracked at the sidebar at the right

Archived here

Link here.

Consolidation in Western Canada’s oil and gas sector received another boost recently with the takeover of Montney-focused producer NuVista Energy by Ovintiv, already one of the region’s largest producers of natural gas and condensate. The C$3.8 billion (US$2.7 billion) deal builds on Ovintiv’s similarly sized acquisition of Paramount Resources in 2024 and gives the company an even stronger position in one of Canada’s most important plays. In today’s RBN blog, we take a closer look at the transaction and where it positions Ovintiv in the Montney.

The old saying, “When it rains, it pours,” certainly applies to the merger and acquisition (M&A) frenzy that has been gripping Western Canada’s energy sector. Like many oil and gas companies worldwide, Canadian firms have been subjected to volatile and declining crude oil prices for most of this year, but they have also had to endure another summer of painfully low Western Canadian natural gas cash prices (for those that were not sufficiently hedged). These trends have depressed stock valuations for some producers and spurred buying interest by larger — and better capitalized — rivals.

Aside from relatively cheap stock valuations, the reasons for M&A can be as varied as the people and companies involved but typically incorporate numerous factors such as: the purchase of specific assets or whole companies outright to increase efficiency and lower per unit production costs; the magnitude of oil and gas production on offer; land position; existing surface facilities for production and processing; and future drilling opportunities that might arise from acquired oil and gas reserves. Other intangibles such as tax pools, regulatory exposure, the exchange rate and employee talents can also be part of the mix.

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CNET Kitchen "Gadget" Review

Crispi.

Link here

Eight New Permits; Two Permits Renewed; One DUC Reported As Completed -- November 18, 2025

Locator: 49737B.

WTI: $60.74.

Active rigs: 31,

Eight new permits, #42484 - #42492, excepting, #42486, inclusive:

  • Operators: XTO (6); Petro-Hunt (2);
  • Fields: Grinnell (McKenzie); North Tioga (Burke)
  • Comments:
    • Petro-Hunt has permits for two Setterlund wells, SWSE 33-159-94; 
      • to be sited 410 FSL and 1800 / 1765 FEL;
    • XTO Energy has permits for six GBU Perses Federal / GBU Perses wells, NWSE / NESE 3-153-96, 
      • to be sited 2391 / 2404 FSL and 1212 / 1361 FEL; Grinnell is a unitized oil field.

Two permits renewed:

  • Lime Rock: a State well and a Kary well, both in lot 1, section 30-144-96, Cabernet oil field, Dunn County;

One producing well (a DUC) reported as completed:

  • 41606, 1,274, CLR, Klepp 301H, Williams County; 

The Perils Of Poliical Compromise -- It Would Be So Much Easier If We Had A King -- Or At Least No Federal Judges -- November 18, 2025

Locator: 49736ARCHIVES. 

Just think, you can subscribe to these magazines for about $75 / year. 

From my news feed today, link here

Yes, having a king would be so much easier. Are people even paying attention any more?

Also in my news feed today. Link here. This is why we don't have a dog. There are no canine therapists in our neighborhood that specialize in canine autism. Or feline autism, for that matter, either. I can't make this stuff up. 

Saudi Arabia To Commit Another $500 Billion To US Investments; On Previous $500 Billion Commitment = $1 Trillion -- November 18, 2025

Locator: 49735SAUDI. 

I'm sure Trump's haters will find something "wrong" with this. 

For Those Who Thought BRK Was A Safe Port In A Storm -- November 18, 2025

Locator:  49734INV. 

Investing: I will be adding a significant amount of cash to my portfolio today -- again, from dividends. Actually, not "my" portfolio but will be transferring it to the portfolio of our two 5-year-old grandsons. Not sure yet what I will buy, but it's likely I will recommend they buy a high-dividend paying oil company. 

BRK-B was down again yesterday, and will likely be down again today. 

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Disclaimer
Brief Reminder

Briefly:
  • I am inappropriately exuberant about the Bakken and I am often well out front of my headlights. I am often appropriately accused of hyperbole when it comes to the Bakken.
  • I am inappropriately exuberant about the US economy and the US market.
  • I am also inappropriately exuberant about all things Apple. 
  • See disclaimer. This is not an investment site. 
  • Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, career, travel, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here. 
  • All my posts are done quickly: there will be content and typographical errors. If something appears wrong, it probably is. Feel free to fact check everything.
  • If anything on any of my posts is important to you, go to the source. If/when I find typographical / content errors, I will correct them. 
  • Many posts are not proofread for several days after they've been posted.  
  • Reminder: I am inappropriately exuberant about the Bakken, US economy, and the US market.
  • I am also inappropriately exuberant about all things Apple. 
  • And now, Nvidia, also. I am also inappropriately exuberant about all things Nvidia. Nvidia is a metonym for AI and/or the sixth industrial revolution.
  • I've now added Broadcom to the disclaimer. I am also inappropriately exuberant about all things Broadcom.
  • And Oracle. 
  • Longer version here.

The Book Page -- November 18, 2025

Locator: 49733BOOKS. 

When Cloudflare is down -- RBN Energy is down -- I go back to .... do I dare say ... books?

Word for the day

Two books arriving today. One was "free" (cash back) from Amazon, a new copy priced at about $30. The other from Thriftbooks which had the best price by far. 

The first one, Sterne's Tristram Shandy, ordered yesterday (?) was at my door before 7:00 a.m. this morning. Whoo-hoo. 

Tristram Shady, Laurence Sterne, Everyman's Library #7, Introduction, c. 1991. It was published from 1759 to 1767. Think about that, some 20 years before the Revolutionary War, and continues to show up on "best book lists." I have very few books from Everyman's Library but wow, they are nice books. 

The other, my personal favorite. Hunter S Thompson's The Proud Highway:Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman Gonzo Letters, Volume 1, years 1955 - 1967, c. 1997. This book has been in my library for decades, perhaps one of the first books that started me on my eclectic reading journey. Somewhere along the line, it appears I lost my copy; at least I couldn't find it this past weekend. Soft cover editions are very affordable, but amazingly, the hard copy editions seem to hold / maintain their original release price, adjusted for inflation. 

So, there you go.

I'm still reading Charles Dickens Tale of Two Cities. I can see why folks Dickens. This is a very thick -- a very, very long -- novel and difficult for the 21st century high school senior to read but yet it catches your interest in the very first chapter if one actually reads it to enjoy it. AI helps a lot. When I come across a paragraph that is a challenge, I prompt ChatGPT with the entire paragraph. ChatGPT's reply is amazing.

Break, break. Back to Laurence Sterne's Tristam Shandy. To get an idea of what ChatGPT can do with a good prompt, see this prompt / reply at this link. I found that reply absolutely amazing.

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Never Quit Reading

The introduction to Tristram Shandy suggests that this novel was a "return" to the novel which "had been forgotten."

The writer immediately references Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, and Samuel Richardson's Pamela. I've read much of Defoe but have probably not read Robinson Crusoe as an adult (for obvious reasons) but have enjoyed all his other work. And Pamela! Of all the books I've read over the years, I never would have imagined someone mentioning Pamela in an introduction to Tristram Shandy. I can't say it enough times, never quit reading.

For those with limited time, one option is to read two or three chapters of the novel in question. Then explore wiki and other reviews and then decide if one wants to read more of that novel. But a close reading of the first two or three pages, and then a solid look at the book through other internet sources and you should really have a great understanding of where this all fits.  

Pamela was a real slog but I did finish it. I would like to re-read it more closely but it's just so incredibly long and wordy -- which one would expect.

Samuel Richardson's Pamela is typically between 450 and 830 pages, varying by edition, while Charles Dickens's novels range widely, with some being shorter like Hard Times (around 17,400 words) and others much longer, such as Bleak House (928 pages). Compared to most Dickens novels, Pamela is a moderately long book, but shorter than his longest works.

Everything Back To Normal — RBN Energy Was Unreachable This Morning; Cloudflare Was Down -- Top Story On CNBC Earlier -- WTI Up Slightly -- Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Locator: 49732B. 

Updates

8:41 a.m. CT: RBN Energy is back up. Whoo-hoo! 

Original Post 

Cloudflare: affecting x and ChatGPT! Sites like x, service like ChatGPT need to have backup cloud support. It's one thing to lose x or ChatGPT but can one imagine this does to critical sites like banking? For me, interestingly, x is up and interestingly so is ChatGPT. I queried ChatGPT to see if it affected by the Cloudflare issue this morning, and ChatGPT said it varies in different geographic regions, but Cloudflare is on top of this and "fixing" the problem. 


 


LNG: link here. Interesting take; I did not expect this. 


Update on New York's bid to ban new natural gas hook-ups. 


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Back to the Bakken

WTI: $60.06.

New wells: link here.

RBN Energy: unreachable at the moment. It is said to be a "cloud" issue (Cloudflare, specifically).