Summary of Weekly Petroleum Data for the week  ending April 9,  2021......................................................................
 
  
     U.S. crude oil refinery inputs averaged 15.1 million barrels per day   during the week ending April 9, 2021 which was 7,000 barrels per day   more than the previous week’s average. Refineries operated at 85.0% of   their operable capacity last week. Gasoline production increased last   week, averaging 9.6 million barrels per day. Distillate fuel production   increased last week, averaging 4.6 million barrels per day.
  U.S.   crude oil imports averaged 5.9 million barrels per day last week, down   by 411,000 barrels per day from the previous week. Over the past four   weeks, crude oil imports averaged about 6.0 million barrels per day,   0.7% more than the same four-week period last year. Total motor gasoline   imports (including both finished gasoline and gasoline blending   components) last week averaged 839,000 barrels per day, and distillate   fuel imports averaged 261,000 barrels per day.
  U.S.  commercial  crude oil inventories (excluding those in the Strategic  Petroleum  Reserve) decreased by 5.9 million barrels from the previous  week. At  492.4 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about 1%  above  the five year average for this time of year. Total motor gasoline   inventories increased by 0.3 million barrels last week and are about 2%   below the five year average for this time of year. Finished gasoline   inventories increased while blending components inventories decreased   last week. Distillate fuel inventories decreased by 2.1 million barrels   last week and are about 4% above the five year average for this time of   year. Propane/propylene inventories increased by 1.0 million barrels   last week and are about 16% below the five year average for this time of   year. Total commercial petroleum inventories decreased by 9.1 million   barrels last week.
  Total products supplied over  the last  four-week period averaged 19.6 million barrels a day, up by  20.0% from  the same period last year. Over the past four weeks, motor  gasoline  product supplied averaged 8.8 million barrels a day, up by  37.4% from  the same period last year. Distillate fuel product supplied  averaged  3.9 million barrels a day over the past four weeks, up by 8.6%  from the  same period last year. Jet fuel product supplied was up 24.8%  compared  with the same four-week period last year.
  Black Blade (a.k.a. Dennis Erectus)
  This wek's EIA Petroleum Inventory Status Report is MODERATELY BULLISH   as Crude inventories decreased nearly 6 million bbls while Total   Commercial Petroleum Inventories increased JUST OVER 9 million bbls as   refinery utilization increased to around 85% as refiners overcame the   struggles recovering from th "Great Texas Freeze" a few weeks ago.   Refiners are also in the midst of making preparations to refine summer   blends of transportation fuels so refinery utilization rate will reflect   the seasonal maintenance issues. Tankers that were backed up during  the  Suez Canal blockage are showing up and that may increase  inventories  temporarily in the coming weeks but it does appear that  deand recovery  coud be at hand as transporation fuels see more demand  as well as  manufacturing demand. But there is limited upside as  millions remain  unemployed and more are "telecommuting" from home  rather than travel  into offices. Meanwhile OPEC+  is expected to  increase oil production by  350,000 bbls/day. We also now have the  International Energy Agency  (IEA) calling for a whopping increase of  5.7 mb/d production. If there's  that much demand for that much  additional crude then the IEA has a very  bullish outlook for the  economy and the IEA is most often very  pessimistic about energy demand.  Make of it what you will. The US  economy is running on fumes and looks  forward to the next "Monetary  Transfusion" or "Stimulus Package" or as  some of us say "Gimme my Biden  Bucks!". .  
   As for the "Blade  Portfolio" we added  VSTO this last week and we are still holding  positions in our personal  defense and security stocks MACE, POWW and  MAGS. Not as many gun buyers  ... that is until Joe Biden began talking  "Gun Control" agai  which  spurred on another surge in gun sales. Still,  the limiting factor is the  lak of affordable ammo. That may soon  change. Remington Ammo (now owned  by our latest stock addition to the  Blade Portfolio is Vista Outdoors).  Vista Outdoors announced that they  were expanding and ramping up ammo  production 24/7 at the Arkansas  facility and hiring and training  hundreds of new workers.  Since  remington was about a third of US ammo  production pre-pandemic the ammo  supply crunch may begin to ease soon.  As a side note, a  Russian-immigrant friend this week imported a huge  supply of Russian  steel-case ammo (branded with his own company name)  and is selling  online. More steel-cased in .223/5.56 and 5.45x39 are  supposedly coming  in soon as well. However prices will stay somewhat  higher than  pre-oandemic because of inflation that has hit all  commodities as the  US Dollar continues to weaken. That said, those of us  who stockpiled  over the years watched the who madness of the crowds of  unprepared  scramble for limited supplies with some amusement. We of  course lived  by the motto "buy it cheap and stack it deep". The same old  story -  "Grasshopper and Ant" - Aesop.
    Silver and Gold prices are still  getting bounced around - up one day and  down the next. We just keep  adding physical silver and mining shares  via our  "dollar-cost-averaging" strategy. We have only adding more  mining  shares of GFI and KL this last week though. The US just can't  seem to  stop printing money "out of thin air". This obviously will at  some  point skyrocket precious metals prices (as well as all hard  assets).  One bargain in the whole investing complex right now is the  depressed  prices of Silver and Gold bullion so we are taking advantage  of this  opportunity. Buy assets while they are either ignored or hated.  In the  case of precious metals it is an ultimate hedge against inflation  and  economic uncertainty. 
   Our  Cryptocurrencies continue to make  wild swings in price but we now sit at  BTC near $65,000 which we use as  our Cryptocurrency benchmark. We  continue to hold BTC, ETH, ETC, LTC,  MKR, TEZOS, XRP ALGO, COMP, CGLD,  GRT and BAND. On a side note today  Bitcoin exchange Coinbase goes public  (ticker COIN) with the IPO price  set at $250 a share ... it's currently  up $112.45 at $363.45 a share.  There's a lot of enthusiasm for Cryptos,  however, Banksters are calling  on the SEC, Fed and Governments to reign  in Cryptos. Seems the Central  Banksters don't like competition and they  see Crytos as intruders in  their monopoly. 
    We  continue to add shares of RIG, KOS, MVO,  ET and EPD while holding  steady on our shares of DMLP, SPH, T, VZ, HEP,  IRM, PPL, CAPL and GRME.   We continue to add to our eREIT FUNDRISE.  Our own rentals are occupied  with stable renters and continue to  provide decent cash flow. We now  have three of our stripper wells up  and operating and one more remaining  idled. Not much elase to report on  renewed drilling prospects yet. 
  As  for Food and Necessities  Storage - We reinventoried supplies and added  several hundred pounds of  hard wheat, rice and sugar this last week. Our  projections have a near  5-7 year storage for our needs as we also  continue to add additional  crates of pasta, cases of sauces. etc. We  continue to add a few cases  of Freeze-Dried foods on accasion as we  build up supplies for "very  long storage" needs. We also added a few  more gallons of cooking oil  (stored in very cool dark conditions). We  have begun preps to recycle  out water supplies and through the process  should have recycled nearly  10,000 gallons of fresh water while using  the water currently stored  for gardening use. We are optimistic that the  recent cold didn't do too  much hard to the early blooming fruit trees  (i.e. apricots), while the  late bloomers are starting to come on strong  now (i.e. Nectarines,  peaches, cherries, etc.). We did acquite several  dozen more canning  jars and lids so we are being optimists. 
    As always, get out of  debt and stay out of debt, accumulate physical  Silver and Gold bullion  as "portfolio insurance", and stockpile supplies  of long term  nonperishable foods and basic necessities into storage.  After all we do  "live in interesting times".
  "The Meek shall inherit the earth, but not the mineral rights"  |