Brother has an interview with HF Sinclair up in Dallas. Anyone heard anything good or bad about them?
Tormentos said:
Hate to say it but after 22+ years in the industry I have recently separated from the company I was at due to a merger.
Does anyone have any director/executive level recruiters or headhunters in the Houston area they would recommend?
Thanks
No. This was a merger which affected our c-suite and some senior management positions, myself included.nu awlins ag said:Tormentos said:
Hate to say it but after 22+ years in the industry I have recently separated from the company I was at due to a merger.
Does anyone have any director/executive level recruiters or headhunters in the Houston area they would recommend?
Thanks
Was this your decision? The market is a little shaky right now. Shell is going through a "transition" right now….
Tormentos said:No. This was a merger which affected our c-suite and some senior management positions, myself included.nu awlins ag said:Tormentos said:
Hate to say it but after 22+ years in the industry I have recently separated from the company I was at due to a merger.
Does anyone have any director/executive level recruiters or headhunters in the Houston area they would recommend?
Thanks
Was this your decision? The market is a little shaky right now. Shell is going through a "transition" right now….
Tormentos said:No. This was a merger which affected our c-suite and some senior management positions, myself included.nu awlins ag said:Tormentos said:
Hate to say it but after 22+ years in the industry I have recently separated from the company I was at due to a merger.
Does anyone have any director/executive level recruiters or headhunters in the Houston area they would recommend?
Thanks
Was this your decision? The market is a little shaky right now. Shell is going through a "transition" right now….
Tormentos said:
Hate to say it but after 22+ years in the industry I have recently separated from the company I was at due to a merger.
Does anyone have any director/executive level recruiters or headhunters in the Houston area they would recommend?
Thanks
miller0926 said:
Anyone on here have any experience or insight into being a PETE at a major bank? I'm pretty far into the interview process and they mentioned the long hours multiple times, then after the interview the head guy asked for 5 minutes alone to ask for a comp and to tell me to mull over the position and hours. It's like they're trying to scare me out of the position…. Is it really as bad as they make it out to be?
miller0926 said:
Anyone on here have any experience or insight into being a PETE at a major bank? I'm pretty far into the interview process and they mentioned the long hours multiple times, then after the interview the head guy asked for 5 minutes alone to ask for a comp and to tell me to mull over the position and hours. It's like they're trying to scare me out of the position…. Is it really as bad as they make it out to be?
Do you want historical prices or spot prices when the market is open? There's a couple people on twitter who are always first to discuss WAHA prices. I've reached out to them about how they get their data and its all behind paywalls that their companies front the bill for. I think NGI gives you access to spot price and ICE gives you daily reports of the price movement.CaptnCarl said:
What platform do some of you use to monitor natural gas prices? Particularly interested in Waha hub pricing.
Google searches don't yield a great real time and historical price chart.
NYMEX: HHW00 has good results.
TxAg20 said:miller0926 said:
Anyone on here have any experience or insight into being a PETE at a major bank? I'm pretty far into the interview process and they mentioned the long hours multiple times, then after the interview the head guy asked for 5 minutes alone to ask for a comp and to tell me to mull over the position and hours. It's like they're trying to scare me out of the position…. Is it really as bad as they make it out to be?
Is this an investment bank that works on oil and gas M&A or a commercial bank that participates in RBLs? If an investment bank, expect very long hours. Mostly meetings and phone calls from 9-5 then actual spreadsheet work from 5pm-around midnight. If a commercial bank, don't worry about the hours, it should be "banker's hours". It's mostly reviewing 3rd party reserve reports and applying the banks price deck, discount rates, and concentration parameters. Some of the most financially successful PETEs I know actually started as commercial bank engineers: Mike Black, Autry Stephens, and Tim Leach to name a few.
Family friend had a PhD in PETE, did his decades in industry, took a retirement package one of the downturns and took up a second career assisting banks with deals for about a decade now. He's clearly made his money and is doing this to basically pad the account, keep his brain running, and fund some lifestyle expansion they wouldn't do if they had to just rely on their investments.miller0926 said:
Anyone on here have any experience or insight into being a PETE at a major bank? I'm pretty far into the interview process and they mentioned the long hours multiple times, then after the interview the head guy asked for 5 minutes alone to ask for a comp and to tell me to mull over the position and hours. It's like they're trying to scare me out of the position…. Is it really as bad as they make it out to be?
one MEEN Ag said:Family friend had a PhD in PETE, did his decades in industry, took a retirement package one of the downturns and took up a second career assisting banks with deals for about a decade now. He's clearly made his money and is doing this to basically pad the account, keep his brain running, and fund some lifestyle expansion they wouldn't do if they had to just rely on their investments.miller0926 said:
Anyone on here have any experience or insight into being a PETE at a major bank? I'm pretty far into the interview process and they mentioned the long hours multiple times, then after the interview the head guy asked for 5 minutes alone to ask for a comp and to tell me to mull over the position and hours. It's like they're trying to scare me out of the position…. Is it really as bad as they make it out to be?
He truly works 'part time', probably 25-35 hours a week reviewing the reservoir estimates that underpin deals. He's the only person I know who is happy with the trade off of time versus pay in that industry. He's also one of the few people positioned to be able to finagle a position like that.
So as a first step into a career its going to be a grind. As a last step, it'll still be a grind every now and then but you can dictate a bit more of your hours and contributions.
So step one to enjoying a PETE banking career: Go get a phd in PETE.
Comeby! said:
Ah sheet. Feel like a D. Sorry.
Comeby! said:
Ah sheet. Feel like a D. Sorry.
MAROON said:
tend to agree. Investors are not incentivizing management to drill in excess of cash flow (like they did in Trump's first term). For that reason, I don't see a significant increase in drilling.
I do think he will loosen up regs and permitting which will allow some LNG projects to get greenlighted and move forward.
Dreigh said:MAROON said:
tend to agree. Investors are not incentivizing management to drill in excess of cash flow (like they did in Trump's first term). For that reason, I don't see a significant increase in drilling.
I do think he will loosen up regs and permitting which will allow some LNG projects to get greenlighted and move forward.
Spot on. The approach both the US industry and OPEC+ have taken post Covid (and May 2020, oooff) doesn't lend itself to errant activity. If the next president hopes to dictate the price simply by vocal request, I think it will be a frustrating endeavor.
The prospect of LNG projects have some room to run would be nice.
Dreigh said:MAROON said:
tend to agree. Investors are not incentivizing management to drill in excess of cash flow (like they did in Trump's first term). For that reason, I don't see a significant increase in drilling.
I do think he will loosen up regs and permitting which will allow some LNG projects to get greenlighted and move forward.
Spot on. The approach both the US industry and OPEC+ have taken post Covid (and May 2020, oooff) doesn't lend itself to errant activity. If the next president hopes to dictate the price simply by vocal request, I think it will be a frustrating endeavor.
The prospect of LNG projects have some room to run would be nice.