I love it - people are now sending me links to post. I admit, I did miss this, so it's a few days old.
From Foreign Policy (Oil & Gas): When You Are Betting on Shale Gas, Watch the Dealer's Eyes.
This was right after CHK's bailout by TOTAL in Ohio.
When someone invites you to a party but leaves before dessert, it might be time to locate your own coat and hat. Such are the suspicions generated by Chesapeake Energy, which after selling numerous billion-dollar pieces of its vast shale gas holdings to the world's largest energy companies has abruptly announced that it is drawing down.
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"...we have found McClendon temperamental and ideologically self-destructive to a degree that risked the entire shale-gas bonanza, but that's just us."
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But last week, Chesapeake announced that the risk is too high. The shale-gas rush had resulted in the historical boom-bust bane of the oil patch -- massive over-production, and a price collapse -- and McClendon was moving on; oil, for example, was looking pretty good, the company said. In an amusing piece at the Financial Times, John Dizard, a long-time shale gas skeptic, quotes from Catch-22, and goes on to describe Chesapeake's announcement: "The Wall Street maxim is that they never ring a bell at the top. However, on Jan. 23, Chesapeake Energy did ring a bell at the bottom. The undoubted leader of the shale gas revolution announced that it would reduce drilling expenditures this year by more than 70 per cent, curtail its gas production by 8 per cent, cut land buying by $2 billion, and allow uneconomic gas leases to expire."
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One only notes that McClendon was not signaling his new religion as recently as a month ago, when he was helping himself to Total's billions. According to calculations by Bloomberg's Joe Carroll and Jim Polson (who relied on numbers provided by the consultants IHS Inc.), Total paid $15,000 an acre for the Chesapeake property, or "more than four times the average per-acre price from seven Utica shale transactions tracked by IHS from March 2011 to September 2011." This seemed like a bubble. The Jan. 18 Bloomberg piece quotes IHS analyst Sven Del Pozzo: "I don't feel confident that the prices being paid now are justified. I'm wary."
AubreyNews Part Two...
And finally, this from The State Journal, West Virginia's Business Journal. Whether you agree, disagree, have no opinion, whatever, it seems to always come back to not what Aubrey is necessarily doing - but how he's doing it. This guy is just more of an embarrasment with every passing week.
Coal industry wants answers from Chesapeake on anti-coal funding
The link above is worth the read. Such hypocrites at CHK - and they do it so well. Also, on the same subject: http://dailycaller.com/2012/02/04/si...coal-industry/
When will the people of Oklahoma City wake-up and realize that we have corporate Masters of Deception operating over at 63rd & Western? It's so embarrassing. God, how I wish their name wasn't attached to the old Ford Center. People see that emblazoned in lights, and those who follow business must cringe to see that sordid name of Chesapeake Energy Corporation. Yet, people around here? We rarely hear any of this news. I'm hoping the new owners of The Oklahoman will open up and allow a little of the truth about these outlaws to be heard in their hometown.
In the end, it's our city they are sullying and putting at risk.
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