Augusta said a few days ago
"So today I think TXN is at a point of developing the EFS acreage similar to where AZZ and AUT were 1 year ago. Yet today I see more similarity between TXN and AZZ. Same county. Same big WI. Same initial big IP. Same 'in-house' approach (no big operator). And same disappointing first report of a decline."
and MIR agreed 100%
Two folks with great knowledge of eFS from way back.
Be wise to balance those opinions against a lot of TXN propaganda based on chesapeak.
My concern is aZZ tought us all the danger of expecting well results to resemble thier neighbours. AZZ are surrounded by good results, yet thier results smashed the company and its sp.
The other thing is so far TXN has more in common with AZZ then Chesapeak. Its first decline is very similar to AZZ.
Its a speculation and if they work out ok, great money will be made, if not it runs the danger of the sp tanking.
I, MIR and AUgusta are not saying its not going to be a winner. We are just expressing the fact its way too early to tell and might get hammered if things turn sour with 60day results and well 2.
As esteon said recently "no one judged AUT on Kennedy alone, as kennedy wasnt exactly the most impressive result" and hes dead set right.
But be cautioned about basing beliefs on chesapeaks results.
When AUT had one well , kennedy it was around and under 30c which was mcap of 60M, with twice the acerage of TXN.
whats the thoughts on the middle east Egyption drama.. articles I have read seem to have this as a result of todays loss on the asx.. will this actually be good for oil & gas players if it pushes the price much higher ???
the canal is critical.. its so imperrative that the impact on the oil prices is a consequence if the usa cannot get another puppet government in place pronto
Forgive my ignorance, but the access to the Canal's impact on the price of oil would be more sentiment based wouldn't it? I was under the understanding that modern supertankers which carry the bulk of the world's oil trade by volume are too big to fit through the canal.
If the Egyptian crisis spreads (and dictator or not, Mubarak was one of the US's most staunch ally in the Arab world) then we could see supply contraints hit the market and drive prices higher - although it's hard to see anything happening in Iraq where largely US interests control supply, and the House of Saud which is very US friendly.
Good on you for stepping in agentchased him for a while and left the rest for the cops to sort out ,,,,
I stand corrected, cheers for the article, much appreciated.Egypt is not a major oil producer, but is home to the vitally important Suez Canal, which carries about 2.4 million barrels of oil a day - roughly equivalent to the daily output of Iraq or Brazil.
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