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To: Ed Ajootian who wrote (167612)4/28/2012 4:06:15 PM
From: whenitgoesup   of 178576
 
OEDV 1.66 Interesting post on Yahoo! from jrp1324 ...not sure what to think of it...the number of wells seems way too high?

"As you go to the horizontal Mississippian, and again on our website, we talked about the first 8 wells. Ray just updated you with 2 more. And they're actually performing better than the first 8. As we get more data eventually, we'll update the curves like we have everywhere else. If you look at that slide, those 8 wells -- even those first 8 wells averaged 485,000 BOEs at a depth of about 4,200 feet. At strip pricing, that's a rate of return of 86% to 99%, tremendous rates of return. With that, under that current completion, it equates to a recovery of about 4% to 9% of the oil in place. And assuming we kept those laterals, it's a little -- it's about 55-acre spacing. So do I think -- and this is oil, not gas. So in oil, typically, it's more viscous fluid. You can drill on tighter spacing. You got a lot of oil in place. I think that it's not inconceivable in an oil play to maybe even drill tighter and to double recoveries, maybe 4% to 9% becomes 8% to 18%. And then I think when you stand back and look at that, again, enormous implications. We have 145,000 acres. If you use a spacing like that, you could be talking about something as high as 2,800 wells, plus or minus 2,700, 2,800 wells. And then if you use 0.4 million, 0.5 million barrels per well equivalent, you're talking about over 1 billion barrels net of range. If you double it th "


messages.finance.yahoo.com 

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To: dvdw© who wrote (167769)4/28/2012 4:14:00 PM
From: dvdw©1 Recommendation   of 178576
 
If you have doubts about how to find truth...Carranzana posted this speech by a fella who understands every word.....
Message 28111854

lot of hedge funds are going to fail if they dont get religion....the debate will no longer be between the media as a mouthpiece of bought and paid for opinion.....providing cover is so passe during these times.

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To: Tomas who wrote (167756)4/28/2012 4:19:36 PM
From: whenitgoesup   of 178576
 
RLE Tomas, here is the link to a new analysis, you mentioned, by Industrial Alliance Securities, date April 26. Thanks for pointing this out.

stockgroup.stockhouse.com 

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To: dvdw© who wrote (167768)4/28/2012 5:54:46 PM
From: kollmhn10 Recommendations   of 178576
 
WTF are you babbling about, now?

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To: kollmhn who wrote (167773)4/28/2012 9:10:38 PM
From: katytrader3 Recommendations   of 178576
 
HaHa! Having read student papers for 40 years, I think I understand what he is saying. But as often happens, the effort to pull it apart is daunting. I would simply put a big red question mark in the margin and move on.

katytrader

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To: katytrader who wrote (167774)4/28/2012 9:39:36 PM
From: kollmhn7 Recommendations   of 178576
 
I wouldn't be so shy. I'd give him an F and suggest he find another school.

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To: kollmhn who wrote (167775)4/29/2012 12:44:20 AM
From: katytrader5 Recommendations   of 178576
 
I understand your disposition. But believing that he is persistent, I would guess that he likely would pursue a failing grade through the grade appeal system, which would entail a hearing. He would make his case coherent enough so that sympathetic committee members would urge the dean to recommend to the teacher to revisit the whole issue and/or provide remedial work, and who knows what else. When I was younger I would have done as you would. Over time, academic institutions have come to frown upon negative evaluations and like elsewhere in society make life harder for those favoring rigor. There is more than one reason for the unemployment rate of new graduates being what it is.

katytrader

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From: t4texas4/29/2012 4:05:33 AM
4 Recommendations   of 178576
 
OT: rumania has helmet laws too, but it's ok to ride your motorcycle "oben ohne," i.e., with no top. this is in south east rumania, and the girl was given a warning to wear her helmet. as you can see in the smaller photo below the larger one, she is has nothing on but the helmet.

bild.de 

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To: dvdw© who wrote (167771)4/29/2012 4:11:49 AM
From: Robohogs1 Recommendation   of 178576
 
Inflation protects those who know to take advantage as well as debtors but hurts creditors and sometimes bankers (except they do get paid back more often if in deflated currency). The Fed was built by those in power, whoever they may be, and advantages them. I am not sure a better system has ever been contrived however. Where has Austrian economics proven its mettle? It's easy to criticize but hard to build. I am going to go out and buy an Austrian text and re-teach myself however.

Jon

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To: dvdw© who wrote (167768)4/29/2012 4:16:11 AM
From: Robohogs   of 178576
 
You need to learn basic economics. Prices are currently below the price at which the current level of production can be maintained,i.e., at this level of prices, costs for the marginal producer are below prices, which means they will cut back, reducing supply and increasing prices. Currently the Supply/Demand curve is North America only and somewhat regional even. With the new LNG supplies coming on, the demand curve will shift right albeit with the shipping costs somewhat mitigating impacts on US domestic pricing. It appears to me costs of transport may eat up as much as 2/3 of prices paid by the consumer. At $15 per thousand mcf, that would equate to $5 pricing in US with $10 for transport. Not a huge increase but enough to make most fields in the US able to produce economically.

Jon

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