I'm aware of that and am self isolating at home. Temp now 99.4 (with aspirin) but I ache all over.Vortex2 wrote:Your bug sounds suspicious TBH.vtsnowedin wrote:Nope. Fever broke last night with the help of aspirin. Symptoms now are just a bad chest cold with muscle aches. I will continue to stay home to not give it to friends.stumuz1 wrote:Have you had a test yet VT?
Watching the markets collapse on the TV.
Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
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- UndercoverElephant
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https://www.statnews.com/2020/03/09/peo ... ry-begins/
People who contract the novel coronavirus emit high amounts of virus very early on in their infection, according to a new study from Germany that helps to explain the rapid and efficient way in which the virus has spread around the world.
At the same time, the study suggests that while people with mild infections can still test positive by throat swabs for days and even weeks after their illness, those who are only mildly sick are likely not still infectious by about 10 days after they start to experience symptoms.
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Well if that is true I'm home for another seven days.UndercoverElephant wrote:https://www.statnews.com/2020/03/09/peo ... ry-begins/
People who contract the novel coronavirus emit high amounts of virus very early on in their infection, according to a new study from Germany that helps to explain the rapid and efficient way in which the virus has spread around the world.
At the same time, the study suggests that while people with mild infections can still test positive by throat swabs for days and even weeks after their illness, those who are only mildly sick are likely not still infectious by about 10 days after they start to experience symptoms.
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<yawn>mikepepler wrote:Now below $25.
I presume no one here was running an oil company on Monday, March 31, 1986, when WTI hit $10.25/bbl, and we were bouncing off the walls figuring out how to make payroll that same Friday? (quick clue...sell tubulars!)
Nowadays as a consumer rather than a producer, I have far less objection to low oil prices. As most consumers might feel as well I imagine.
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Oil prices are no longer of any interest. Civilisation as we know it collapsing around us as we speak. Pretty soon, the oil producers won't be able to give the stuff away.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:<yawn>mikepepler wrote:Now below $25.
I presume no one here was running an oil company on Monday, March 31, 1986, when WTI hit $10.25/bbl, and we were bouncing off the walls figuring out how to make payroll that same Friday? (quick clue...sell tubulars!)
Nowadays as a consumer rather than a producer, I have far less objection to low oil prices. As most consumers might feel as well I imagine.
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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Well....238 pages of interest here anyway.UndercoverElephant wrote:Oil prices are no longer of any interest.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:<yawn>mikepepler wrote:Now below $25.
I presume no one here was running an oil company on Monday, March 31, 1986, when WTI hit $10.25/bbl, and we were bouncing off the walls figuring out how to make payroll that same Friday? (quick clue...sell tubulars!)
Nowadays as a consumer rather than a producer, I have far less objection to low oil prices. As most consumers might feel as well I imagine.
I believe you about the prices going lower because of lack of demand, but as with most end of the world scenarios dreamed up during fantasy league doom play, I've got bad news. This isn't the collapse you've been waiting for since peak oil let you down.UndercoverElephant wrote: Civilisation as we know it collapsing around us as we speak. Pretty soon, the oil producers won't be able to give the stuff away.
$10.25 in 1986 equates to $24.19 in 2020 dollars. Today's WTI price ($22.39) is lower in real terms than 1986.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:I presume no one here was running an oil company on Monday, March 31, 1986, when WTI hit $10.25/bbl, and we were bouncing off the walls figuring out how to make payroll that same Friday? (quick clue...sell tubulars!)mikepepler wrote:Now below $25.
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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To those of us in operations on that day (and not knowing if the worst was over yet), future facts like this were pretty irrelevant. We were all feeling like we were trapped in an elevator in freefall, not knowing when it was going to stop.clv101 wrote:$10.25 in 1986 equates to $24.19 in 2020 dollars. Today's WTI price ($22.39) is lower in real terms than 1986.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:I presume no one here was running an oil company on Monday, March 31, 1986, when WTI hit $10.25/bbl, and we were bouncing off the walls figuring out how to make payroll that same Friday? (quick clue...sell tubulars!)mikepepler wrote:Now below $25.
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