Joined April 2011
253 Photos and videos
Wow we really jumped to US cos buying non-op minority interests in Cda
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What if the real price of oil is $70, but it's at the cadence of 3 yrs at $60 and 1 yr at $100
"Hamm said some have predicted that once the Strait of Hormuz reopens to shipping oil through the Persian Gulf, oil prices will drop back to where they were before the Iran war." "“I don’t believe that, at all,” Hamm told the Monitor. “I think that we’ll get back to realistic values of oil and natural gas.” - Bismark Tribune #Bakken #OOTT
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I am pretty sure there is alpha in looking at stocks where the analysts say "no positive catalysts for the next yr" when it's in relation to a cyclical that has been beaten to pieces $matr.to
$MATR.TO Ebitda beat. Up ~18% YTD and insiders keep buying.
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All I've learned from this is tech folks are fine using IM to choose board members but if you're an underlying you'll have multiple calls to determine what shade of green to use
Sam Altman's group chat with Satya Nadella November 21, 2023
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$LTC.v sell side associate opening the financials and seeing they have, 20 swaps for 100 bpd that they need to put in the model
Yeah, Iran takes a lot of supply off the table but have you built in $ltc.v increasing their budget by 20% in your model?
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Yeah, Iran takes a lot of supply off the table but have you built in $ltc.v increasing their budget by 20% in your model?
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Wow big news today with $akt.a acquiring $pou drilling arm Would be a shame if something else happened today to overshadow it
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Yes you're absolutely right! You definitely should water your crops with Brawndo, it's got what plants crave!
This is correct. Iran can’t simply turn off its oil production due to issues of water encroaching its wells. From Claude: This is a well-known technical challenge in petroleum engineering. If Iran were to deliberately curtail or shut in production across its major fields, water infiltration (also called water influx or water encroachment) would be a serious and potentially irreversible problem. Here’s why: The Core Mechanics Most of Iran’s giant fields — Ahvaz, Gachsaran, Marun, Aghajari — are carbonate reservoirs under natural water drive. Aquifers underlying or flanking the reservoir rock are under pressure, and they push water upward into the pore space as oil is produced. When you stop producing oil, you remove the pressure sink that was keeping water at bay. The aquifer doesn’t stop — it keeps pushing. Specific Technical Problems 1. Water Coning and Cresting In vertical and horizontal wells respectively, shutting in production removes the drawdown that was managing the water-oil contact. When production resumes, the water-oil interface may have moved upward significantly, meaning wells that were previously clean producers now produce predominantly water. 2. Irreversible Aquifer Encroachment Carbonate reservoirs like Iran’s have highly heterogeneous permeability — fractures, vugs, and matrix. Water preferentially invades high-permeability channels (fractures) during a shut-in, bypassing oil in the matrix. This oil becomes residually trapped and is extremely difficult to recover later. The damage is often permanent. 3. Wellbore Flooding In wells that are shut in rather than properly killed, water can migrate up the wellbore itself, particularly in older or poorly-cemented completions. Resuming production from a water-filled wellbore requires costly workover operations and risks formation damage. 4. Pressure Redistribution and Cross-Flow In multi-zone completions (common in Iran’s stacked carbonate pays), shutting in causes pressure to equilibrate between zones. Water from a water-bearing zone can cross-flow into an oil-bearing zone downhole, contaminating it without any surface signal. 5. Reservoir Pressure Maintenance Complications Iran has been injecting water into many of its fields (e.g., via the NIOC EOR programs) specifically to maintain pressure and slow natural aquifer encroachment. A sudden shut-in disrupts the carefully managed injection/production balance, potentially causing localized pressure spikes or collapses that further destabilize the water-oil contact geometry. The Scale Problem Iran’s fields are among the largest and most complex carbonate systems in the world, some with very active aquifers. The Asmari and Bangestan formations have notoriously high natural water drive energy. Unlike sandstone reservoirs where water movement is relatively slow and predictable, fractured carbonates can see very rapid water breakthrough once the equilibrium is disturbed. Practical Consequence A prolonged shut-in — even of a few months — across major Iranian fields could permanently impair ultimate recovery factors, potentially stranding hundreds of millions of barrels of recoverable oil. This is why, even during sanctions regimes, Iran has tried to maintain at least minimum production levels rather than fully shutting fields in. The engineering cost of a cold shut-in followed by restart is enormous, and the reservoir damage may not become fully apparent until years later when water cuts rise to uneconomic levels. It’s a meaningful deterrent to any strategy that contemplates a clean “off switch” for Iranian production.
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$GFL getting crushed on paying too much for $ses.to while one of ses largest shareholder wants to kill the deal while there are also some competition concerns all create quite the transaction dynamic
Abrams Capital now owns 10% of the shares of SES.TO "The firm does not believe that the Arrangement is in the best interests of SECURE and its shareholders and intends to vote against it".
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So since $SES.to announcement $GFL is down c$4b in mkt cap which is nearly 2/3rd of the ses EV of the deal... Impressive!
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Shout out to the jpm analyst who called $ses.to "E&P assets" and downgraded $GFL on the worse biz quality
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Anyone want to join me and start a ranch? Effectively free money now
I know we're all looking at oil. But live cattle just rose above $2.5 per lb for the first time (to an all-time high). The BBQ season in America is going to be rather expensive for flipping burgers.
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Have to assume oil is declining because it seems like things are de-escalating ceasefire is actually taking hold despite the US blockade.
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So this is the Hormuz closure somehow ending up medium/long term bearish for oil? Gcc will be incentivize to build other egress options leading to lower risk prem in future? Short term expect it higher bc we need to rebuild stocks Would be classic oil a la 2010 Abaqaiq attack
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Competition bureau:
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It's actually kind of surprising a country willing to build the Line for $9t was unwilling to invest a fraction of that to avoid the geopolitics of dealing with Iran.
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Dustin Lowenberger retweeted
Trump to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs: "How many men did you send altogether, approximately, for the operation?" Caine: "Uhhh, I'd love to keep that a secret, Mr. President" Trump: "OK, well, we are. But I will tell you -- the number, I'll keep it a secret, but it was hundreds."
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What does the Strait trade at? 15x EBITDA?
US Midstream execs watching Iran implement a fee-for-service scheme on a long-life critical infrastructure asset with no alternative flow routes
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Headline we haven't seen in a decade "Suncor files contingent resources report" $SU
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