Well, I went with $96.06 (whoop!). Thanks for all the help!!! Or not
Was pissed back in April but now I'm glad I locked in my new electricity contract when I did, rates are going to go through the roof if NG doesn't come back down.jetch17 said:
Nat Gas pushin $10
AlaskanAg08 said:
Take your pick:
OCTG- Sold out until next year
Frac/completions- most spreads are sold out
Sand- When you do have a frac crew, sand can still be tricky
People: In the words of John Daniel from Daniel Energy Partners, why work in O&G when Buc-ees pays $16-$20/hr lol!
AlaskanAg08 said:
Sorry to hear that you are having to run that stuff at such high prices. Although I work for Tenaris, I don't pretend to understand the casing/OCTG side of the business. Those guys are making steel 24/7 and milling pipe 24/7, and are apparently still sold out for the next 18 months. Its insane.
Any additional details on this?cajunaggie08 said:
Schlumberger is creating a joint venture with their OneSubsea group, Aker Solutions and Subsea 7. SLB will own 70%, Aker 20%, and Subsea 7 10%
Yes, several. The pitch made to us worker bees at OneSubsea was that they have very little crossover in terms of markets where they have strong sales. Upper management skirted all questions about how will they combine product offerings and engineering teams. They did say they don't expect to immediately close any plants or logistics bases as both companies are running lean after 2020 and there aren't many facilities that can handle taking on the increased work. I'm not stressing since the product line I work on is much larger in terms of market share than Aker's.terradactylexpress said:
Don't SLB and Aker have competing product lines?
MAROON said:
Casing is tight supply v demand. You also have foreign producers who have a quota they can bring into the states and some with duties, and you might have another big producer about to get hit with duties for their Mexican manufactured pipe.
When COVID hit all the distributors intentionally reduced their on-hand inventories, so they have not been able to build any inventory.
But it's 2022 issue - we expect pipe prices to go down in 2023.
Usually the product lines merging and technology sharing is the last part of a merger. Standard merger playbook is to keep the sales and tech in place, start pushing executives over to the freshly bought companies, and start looking to cut overhead. There probably won't be much for any executive to make their name cutting fat. SLB might be happy to never truly merge the products if their isn't much customer overlap.cajunaggie08 said:Yes, several. The pitch made to us worker bees at OneSubsea was that they have very little crossover in terms of markets where they have strong sales. Upper management skirted all questions about how will they combine product offerings and engineering teams. They did say they don't expect to immediately close any plants or logistics bases as both companies are running lean after 2020 and there aren't many facilities that can handle taking on the increased work. I'm not stressing since the product line I work on is much larger in terms of market share than Aker's.terradactylexpress said:
Don't SLB and Aker have competing product lines?
True, but the IPO plans impact that.AustinAg008 said:
Saudi has a pretty high floor for prices. Interesting to see if they over react and try to announce some large cut to help support that floor.
Another variable in the volatility equation.....
David Wallace said:
UK is lifting the franking ban they instituted back in 2019.