Crazy to think we're coming up on 7 years on this thread.
jetch17 said:
$65 this morning
Raptor or boat lookin today? At least something with trucknutzzzz
CrazyRichAggie said:jetch17 said:
$65 this morning
Raptor or boat lookin today? At least something with trucknutzzzz
Wife really wants one of those new Escalades
AustinAg008 said:
Crazy to think we're coming up on 7 years on this thread.
NM. Wishful thinking...AustinAg008 said:
Get ready for a nice run up this week.
Hearing from my PE friends that there is a lot of grief over hedges they set in the upper 40s when oil was just first recovering.Cyp0111 said:
I think we're priced pretty optimal. If you need $70s to make it work you better either look at your cost structure or debt levels.
one MEEN Ag said:Hearing from my PE friends that there is a lot of grief over hedges they set in the upper 40s when oil was just first recovering.Cyp0111 said:
I think we're priced pretty optimal. If you need $70s to make it work you better either look at your cost structure or debt levels.
One conversation was that the head of the whole fund was bemoaning 'who told them to set those hedges so low.' Nobody in the room had the guts to tell the head honcho it was his orders.
While there's some recovery happening right now, capital isn't moving around like it used to, and those how were caught in the downturn don't have a lot of unhedged capacity right now. I think prices continue to rise as demand improves, and decline curves rear their ugly nonconventional heads.
Username checks out.Premium said:one MEEN Ag said:Hearing from my PE friends that there is a lot of grief over hedges they set in the upper 40s when oil was just first recovering.Cyp0111 said:
I think we're priced pretty optimal. If you need $70s to make it work you better either look at your cost structure or debt levels.
One conversation was that the head of the whole fund was bemoaning 'who told them to set those hedges so low.' Nobody in the room had the guts to tell the head honcho it was his orders.
While there's some recovery happening right now, capital isn't moving around like it used to, and those how were caught in the downturn don't have a lot of unhedged capacity right now. I think prices continue to rise as demand improves, and decline curves rear their ugly nonconventional heads.
How long do these companies usually hedge for?
I'm way downstream, the higher gas/diesel prices go the more we make as a company - and the inverse is true, so last year was rough.
Never hedged though and still haven't, so wondering what kind of financial play I could make to "lock in" gas prices. Basically, if they go way down again we would make money and if they go way up we would lose money - but net on both we would make the same as today.
We do over $400K a day in fuel sales.
And now we celebrate >$60. I looked back, and Sunday's WTI high of $67.98 is the highest WTI futures have been since 10/23/2018.Fredd said:AustinAg008 said:
Crazy to think we're coming up on 7 years on this thread.
For real. I remember when the bottom fell out and our VP was saying we could make money at $65 oil. We all rolled our eyes and thought he was crazy.
BlackGoldAg2011 said:And now we celebrate >$60. I looked back, and Sunday's WTI high of $67.98 is the highest WTI futures have been since 10/23/2018.Fredd said:AustinAg008 said:
Crazy to think we're coming up on 7 years on this thread.
For real. I remember when the bottom fell out and our VP was saying we could make money at $65 oil. We all rolled our eyes and thought he was crazy.
one MEEN Ag said:Hearing from my PE friends that there is a lot of grief over hedges they set in the upper 40s when oil was just first recovering.Cyp0111 said:
I think we're priced pretty optimal. If you need $70s to make it work you better either look at your cost structure or debt levels.
One conversation was that the head of the whole fund was bemoaning 'who told them to set those hedges so low.' Nobody in the room had the guts to tell the head honcho it was his orders.
While there's some recovery happening right now, capital isn't moving around like it used to, and those how were caught in the downturn don't have a lot of unhedged capacity right now. I think prices continue to rise as demand improves, and decline curves rear their ugly nonconventional heads.
Cyp0111 said:
Price of taking on debt isn't just the interest rate