Locator: 49680ORACLE.
Beth:
Shay:
App Economy Insights:
Beth:
Shay:
Locator: 49678ND.
Basin Electric Power Cooperative and NextEra Energy Resources have signed an agreement to explore building a natural gas-fueled generation facility in North Dakota.
The project would support a multi-gigawatt data center campus in the western part of the state.
The proposed facility is called the River Run Energy Center. It would have a capacity of about 1,450 megawatts and could be operational by 2030.
The article has a lot more datapoints, including:
North Dakota -- especially northwest North Dakota -- is going to look a whole different than when I was growing up there.
Locator: 49677B.
This is a good example of what they're doing in the Bakken right now:
New permits, calendar year, 2025: that third Vanville permit today, is oil and gas permit #1082 for calendar year 2025. The number of NDIC file numbers / permits in calendar year 2025 to date will be more than 1,082, but the NDIC includes SWDs (salt water disposal wells) among total permits issued). It's my impression that of the 1,000 new permits, the operators will spud about 750 wells in calendar year 2025, with many of those spuds related to permits issued in 2024.
WTI: $58.46.
Active rigs: 27 -- a recent low. Heading into winter.
Three new permits, #42550 - #42552, inclusive:
One permit renewed:
Seven permits canceled:
Three producing wells (DUCs) reported as completed:
Well of interest:
Locator: 49676THEFED.
Sphinx .... Oracle of Delphi ... Oracle of Omaha .... the Fed.
Productivity has been rising at about 2% for "decades" per Fed chairman.
Fact check:
Disinflation is being seen in the services industry. Services accounts for two-thirds of the US economy.
Dow: up significantly after the Fed chairman's comments, after cutting 25 basis points -- up 460 points, not over 48,000. Trending in such a way that the Dow could rise more than 500 points before the close. And it did, now up over 525 points.
S&P 500: up 47 points -- trading at 6,888.
NASDAQ: up 83 points -- trading at 23,660.
If this is not a Santa Claus rally, I do not know what is.
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BRK
On a day that the Fed cuts rates and the Dow surges, as well as the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ, for all practical purposes, BRK-B is down again.
Up seven cents / share on a day the markets surge. Including energy -- with one huge exception -- natural gas carriers (OKE, LNG, and VG). WMB is down almost 2%. SRE is up very slightly. ENB is down more than 1% and EPD is down a quarter percent. Meanwhile the oils / integrated are doing great, each up about 2% (CVX, COP, PSX). Valero and MPC are up 1% and half-a-percent, respectively. OKLO is down 2% -- this certainly seems to comfort those who are worried about energy costs for AI infrrastructure.
AAPL is up about 3/4ths of a percent, over $2 / share. AVGO is up another 1.25% while ORCL is flat. Oracle reports after the close today.
Both Chubb and BRK-B were down today. Chubb was down over 1.5% (down almost $5/share) and BRK-B was down $1/share, back down to $490. I'm so glad I spent three hours with ChatGPT discussing BRK, Chubb, and global insurance. After that discussion it all makes sense why BRK, Chubb, and insurance companies in general would be down today.
UNP, a proxy for BNSF, was up over 1.5% (up $3.90/share today) and AAPL was up half-a-percent, up $1.60/share.
The GE Vernova story is telling. GE Vernova's share price jumped 15% after CEO's remarks today, and the doubling of the dividend. Did you catch that: GE Vernova double its dividend.
GE Vernova is all about natural gas powering AI.
I was curious so I asked Charlie:
AI prompt:
Back to powering AI data centers, etc. GE Vernova is all about powering AI data centers with a focus on natural gas right now and looking to nuclear later. Against that data point, BRK is probably one of the largest power (electricity) suppliers in the US, and is huge into natural gas properties (think OXY). In some ways, BRK is #1 in insurance but is very, very will situated for supplying electricity to the AI buildout. So what gives? How can GE Vernova double its dividend and see its share price JUMP 15% IN ONE DAY! What gives? Where does BRK stand with regard to GE Vernova and its involvement with the AI buildout? Where is BRK with all its energy holdings compared to well-known power companies like NextEra Energy and Duke, etc.
Extremely interesting. Almost comparing apples to oranges. I didn't ask Charlie where he would put his/her/its money if he/she/it were an investor, but my takeaway is this:
Charlie really lays out the BRK story versus the GE Vernova story very, very well. Makes me feel very, very comfortable with BRK.
On a completely different note, when one sees "a GE Vernova" double its dividend and sees its shares jump 15% in one day, one can be very disappointed / discouraged not to have "a GE Vernova" in one's portfolio when one was aware of the opportunity six months ago.
But, when I look at my overall portfolio and what I've been doing, I'm reminded that I should be quite happy. It's been an incredible year, but more importantly, it's been an incredible 30 years. No regrets. Some "what-ifs" but I try very, very hard to ignore "what-ifs" and simply move on.
Locator: 49675INVESTING.
I may have to start posting chart of the morning, chart of the afternoon, and chart of the day in the New Year!
Locator: 49674B.
GE Vernova: AI is not a bubble.
Apple, foldable phones:
AMGN dividend: raises dividend to $2.52 / share from $2.38; payable March 6, 2025 -- 5.88% increase from previous.
Motley Fool:
Note blog's disclaimer: this is not an investment site. This is a social media site with emphasis on the Bakken through education and entertainment. The author has eclectic interests and those interests often show up on the blog. Content and typographical errors will be present.
Three websites to surf during the midnight hours:
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Back to the Bakken
WTI: $58.36.
New wells reporting:
RBN Energy: with M&A, Anero homes in on West Virginia and exits Ohio. Link here. Archived.
The consolidation of upstream and midstream assets in the Marcellus/Utica continued this week with announcements by Antero Resources and Antero Midstream that they had reached agreements to acquire privately held HG Energy II’s extensive holdings in “almost heavenly” West Virginia and to divest non-core assets in Ohio to Infinity Natural Resources and Northern Oil & Gas. In today’s RBN blog, we detail the deals, which will make “the two Anteros” West Virginia-only companies, and discuss how the transactions affirm recent trends in Appalachia.
It was just a few months ago that we blogged about two big M&A deals in the Northeast. First, in Might as Well Jump!, we looked at EOG Resources’ $5.6 billion purchase of Encino Acquisition Partners (EAP), the Utica’s #1 producer of condensate. That deal, which closed on August 1, gave EOG its third “foundational” focus area (the others are the Eagle Ford and the Permian's Delaware Basin) and supported the view that the Utica really is an up-and-comer. Soon thereafter, in Fun, Fun, Fun, we discussed the plan by EQT Corp., the Marcellus/Utica’s largest gas producer, to buy Olympus Energy’s upstream and midstream assets in southwestern Pennsylvania for $1.8 billion in cash and stock. We pointed out that the Olympus deal, which closed on July 1, came on the heels of EQT’s August 2023 acquisition of Tug Hill’s gas production assets and XcL Midstream’s pipeline and processing assets in northern West Virginia for $5.2 billion.
The four deals that Antero Resources and Antero Midstream — two separate but closely aligned, publicly owned companies — announced on December 8 hit a lot of the same notes as the EOG and EQT transactions. Let’s start with the agreements with HG Energy II, which is backed primarily by Quantum Energy Partners. Antero Resources said it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire HG Energy’s upstream assets for $2.8 billion in cash plus the assumption of HG Energy’s commodity hedge book. At the same time, Antero Midstream said it has agreed to buy HG Energy’s midstream assets for $1.1 billion in cash. Both deals are expected to close in Q2 2026.
Antero Resources currently holds about 475,000 acres in northern West Virginia — yellow-shaded areas in Figure 1 below show their general location — and produced about 3.4 Bcfe/d in Q3 2025 or, more precisely, 2.2 Bcf/d of natural gas and 206 Mb/d of NGLs. HG Energy, in turn, holds about 385,000 net acres (green-shaded areas) and produces about 850 MMcfe/d. (No gas/NGLs breakdown of HG Energy’s production was provided.) HG Energy also comes to Antero with more than 400 remaining drilling locations with average lateral lengths of about 20,300 feet. (More on that in a moment.)