Locator: 49853TAXES.
BRK: CEO will take $25 million salary.
From AI:
This won't work for me now but something to keep in my hip pocket, as they say. LOL.Locator: 49853TAXES.
BRK: CEO will take $25 million salary.
From AI:
This won't work for me now but something to keep in my hip pocket, as they say. LOL.Locator: 49850B.
CNBC: still limiting screen time to first ten minutes of Jim Cramer every morning. Haven't missed Steve Liesman a bit.
Unemployment rate: dips to 4.4%.
Job creation: at 50,000 misses estimates of 75,000.
4Q25 GDP: off the chart! Link here. Even Cramer is suggesting US 4Q25 GDP is 7%.
Goldilocks economy: GDP off the chart with unemployment rate dropping, inflation slowing?
US trade deficit drops unexpectedly: lowest since 2009.
Venezuela oil: Trump gets it. Brings me back to the Keystone XL pipeline arguments. American public never understood that debate.
Iran: goes dark. Really, really dark. My hunch: CIA and Mossad on the ground giving US, Israel timely updates.
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Back to the Bakken
WTI: $58.25.
New wells reporting:
RBN Energy: while many US refiners face a gloomy outlook, things look brighter in PADD 3. Link here. Archived.
The U.S. refining industry has been on a real rollercoaster ride in recent years, as the disastrous COVID shutdown period of 2020 — which led to the closure of many refineries — was closely followed by the “Platinum Age” margins experienced when demand recovered in 2021 and 2022. Since then, the trend has been mostly downhill, as demand growth has slowed and new refining capacity has come online from projects that were delayed during the pandemic. But while many of these trends were felt across the U.S. (and even globally), there have been major regional differences in refiner market performance, a dynamic we expect to continue as we head toward an uncertain future, made even more so by the recent events in Venezuela. In today’s RBN blog, we take a region-by-region look at the future of the U.S. refining industry and explain why reductions in refining capacity are expected in some areas while others may be in a position to thrive.
Before we get into the regional outlook, let’s take the 50,000-foot view of where things stand today at the global level. Since 2010, global refinery net capacity has increased by about 700 Mb/d per year, with significant year-to-year volatility (see Figure 1 below). A decades-high level of net refining capacity additions of 2.1 MMb/d took place in 2023, the largest annual increase since 1977, followed by a still-significant 1.15 MMb/d of net additions in 2024. While our preliminary estimates show an addition of more than 1 MMb/d in 2025, they were negated by an even-larger level of refinery closures, resulting in a net capacity decrease of about 200 Mb/d (which excludes all the temporary loss of operating capacity in Russia). Most of the capacity growth in recent years has come from projects that suffered pandemic-related pauses or slowdowns, with large projects in the Middle East, Asia Pacific and Africa (primarily the Dangote refinery in Nigeria) leading the way. In our upcoming Future of Fuels report we will include a forecast for net capacity changes expected over the next five years (through 2030) based on our analysis of which new projects will be completed in that timeframe and planned refinery closures.
Locator: 49849MMF.
My favorite chart.
MMFs.
Increased by $70.80 billion to $7.80 trillion for eight-day period ending Wednesday, January 7, 2026.
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The Book Page
At Amazon.com now, 40% off, under $19.00. Purchased January 9, 2026; will arrive tomorrow, January 10, 2026.
Locator: 49848LEASESALES.
Boom! In what universe is an acre of land -- minerals -- worth $220,000? In the Bakken, a 640-acre spaced well with 500,000 bbls cumulative oil at $50 / bbl at the wellhead yields: $40,000 / acre? If that $220,000 is not a typo, one needs to study this -- what does it mean?
New Mexico sold 16 parcels totaling over 7,500 acres for $58.26 million in its quarterly oil and gas lease sale, the Department of the Interior (DOI) has said.
“This is the third highest value for highest bid/acre for a parcel for BLM [Bureau of Land Management]”, the DOI said in a statement online.
The average high bid per acre was about $86,000 while the average high bid per parcel was around $19.2 million, according to results published on the BLM’s National Fluids Lease Sale System (NFLSS).
Devon acquired a 480-acre tract of land in Lea County in a bid of $16.8 million, the most paid by any one energy firm, $35,000 / acre.
The Federal Abstract Company paid nearly $6.5 million for a quarter-section of land in Lea County while R&R Royalty offered $3.5 million for 80-acres, also in Lea County, New Mexico, $42,625 / acre and $43,750 / acre..
The Carlsbad Current-Argus reported Pride Energy paid $3.2 million for 200 and 400 acre tracts of land in Eddy County. That data point is not clear, but I assume it was $3.2 million for one 200-acre tract and another $3.2 million for a separate 400-acre tract.