What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
No specifics beyond just a remedial understanding of it. Just wanted to share that any industry involved in corrosion or erosion prevention will have demand until the end of time. You can't stop physics and nobody wants to pay for material that can withstand that type of corrosion.SweaterVest said:
This is a bit specific, but does anybody here know a lot about MIC (microbial corrosion) that would be willing to talk to me for a few minutes? I'm considering a jump back into the industry and the company I'm talking to is new to the space. I'm trying to model out how big/realistic their opportunity is.
CEOs have already said if the president calls and says to Drill Baby Drill they won't place any extra weight in their words. The market and investors payback demands set the drill schedule.Dreigh said:
I know this isn't a the Pol forum, but I am interested to hear this thread's thoughts on the potential effects of a Trump presidency on the US oil and gas sector.
Many of the opinions I've seen so far on Twitter would suggest he would be bearish for oil, while a few don't believe the industry is in a place to drill the price down to whatever low number Trump might post on social media.
Personally, I don't think either candidate is in a place to dictate the oil price much, outside of additional SPR releases.
Not posting this to promote dooming or pessimism, just value the thoughts of folks here that I know are smarter and more insightful than me.
xMusashix said:
What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
Fear and limiting exploration & production, driving down supply which causes prices short term to rise... hurting all Americans...?xMusashix said:
What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
Democrat administrations are most often great for the major's bottom lines. The big guys make their money on price, not volume, and the price tends higher under Dems.xMusashix said:
What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
Sims said:Democrat administrations are most often great for the major's bottom lines. The big guys make their money on price, not volume, and the price tends higher under Dems.xMusashix said:
What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
So while their policies toward the O&G industry typically are malevolent the results of their administrations are typically positive for the companies...lastly the ones who suffer most from the spite of Dems against O&G are the citizenry.
Less work for more money. Screw the country and line my pockets!Sims said:Democrat administrations are most often great for the major's bottom lines. The big guys make their money on price, not volume, and the price tends higher under Dems.xMusashix said:
What democratic policy has been good for the industry in the short term?
So while their policies toward the O&G industry typically are malevolent the results of their administrations are typically positive for the companies...lastly the ones who suffer most from the spite of Dems against O&G are the citizenry.
Definitely an issue in a longer term view - but as it pertains to the short term where you question focused - I'd say democrats are good to O&G companies finances but probably not their operations.xMusashix said:
Volatility hurts the oil and gas business because it becomes harder to forecast a price premise. Couple that with the duration to bring a project online and the capex you have to spend before you make a drop exacerbates the problem.
waryman said:
I may have just the guy for you. Will check with him tomorrow and let you know.
companies across all industries are finding out this is an excellent way to get people to quit without having to do a RIF and pay anything.donkeykick90 said:
Bummer, hope this isn't the start of other operators going this route. Currently have a Mon/Fri work from home and office Tues-Thurs and don't want to lose this.
Yeah I know quite a few people that have joined XOM recently and it sounds like that is the case.txaggie_08 said:
Pretty sure XOM has done the same thing, bringing everyone back 5 days a week.
Furlock Bones said:companies across all industries are finding out this is an excellent way to get people to quit without having to do a RIF and pay anything.donkeykick90 said:
Bummer, hope this isn't the start of other operators going this route. Currently have a Mon/Fri work from home and office Tues-Thurs and don't want to lose this.
Wiggletrace said:
Can you share who the company is? I just accepted an offer from a company with the same schedule…