Current Affairs
The day after Independence Day in the U.S., Jeff Bezos will give up the day-to-day reins of the now-colossal company he founded nearly three decades ago.
Bezos, speaking Wednesday at Amazon’s annual shareholder — his last as CEO — announced that he will step aside as chief exec on July 5, whereupon Andy Jassy, who is currently CEO of Amazon Web Services, will take over the role.
Amazon had previously announced the CEO transition plan. Bezos isn’t going to stray very far — he will remain involved in major decisions at the company as executive chairman.
“I’m very excited to move into the exec chair role where I will focus my energies and attention on new products and early initiatives,” Bezos said.

Stanley Druckenmiller is widely considered one of the greatest investors ever.
Born in Pittsburgh in 1953, he studied English at Bowdoin College before starting work towards an Economics PhD at the University of Michigan. In 1977, he dropped out of the PhD program and joined the Pittsburgh National Bank as a retail investment analyst.
After learning the ropes, Druckenmiller founded his own investment firm in 1981 — Duquesne Capital Management. He established such a strong track record that hedge fund legend George Soros recruited him to work at the Quantum Fund, which he did from 1988 to 2000.
As the Quantum Fund’s lead portfolio manager, Druckenmiller helped Soros pull off one of the single greatest trades: In 1992, the pair “Broke the Bank of England” with a bet against the British Pound that netted a $1B pay day.
Following his long partnership with Soros, Druckenmiller built Duquesne Capital to a peak of $12B of assets under management. In 2010, he returned all of his investors’ money and converted Duquesne into a family office.
Why?
Druckenmiller no longer wanted to deal with the “stress” of maintaining such an exceptional trading record.
And the record is almost peerless: over more than 4 decades of investing, Druckenmiller has never recorded a down year (his fund even notched a return of +11% in 2008). During one stretch, he compounded assets at 30%+ a year for 30 straight years. Today, he has a net worth of $5B+.
To find out more, The Hustle recently spoke with the trading legend. The conversation was set up by Toggle AI, an investing AI startup that Druckenmiller counts among his investments.
Druckenmiller tells us:
- What makes a great investor
- How he makes an investment decision
- Whether we are in another tech bubble
- What career advice Druckenmiller has for 20-year olds
- What he thinks of crypto (Bitcoin, Ethereum and Dogecoin)
- Which Big Tech firm will be the first to reach a $5T valuation
And a whole lot more. Enjoy.

Each week Josef Schachter will give you his insights into global events, price forecasts and the fundamentals of the energy sector. Josef offers a twice monthly Black Gold newsletter covering the general energy market and 30 energy, energy service and pipeline & infrastructure companies with regular updates. We hold quarterly subscriber webinars and provide Action BUY and SELL Alerts for paid subscribers. Learn more.
EIA Weekly Data: The EIA data on Wednesday May 26th was mixed. Commercial Crude Inventories fell 1.7Mb to 484.3Mb as Net Imports fell by 265Kb/d or by 1.9Mb on the week. If there had been no change in Net Imports, Commercial Stocks would have seen a modest increase. Motor Gasoline Inventories fell 1.7Mb as gasoline demand rose into the beginning of the holiday driving season. Refinery Utilization rose 0.7% to 87.0% last week (last year 71.3%). US Crude Production remained at 11.0Mb/d. Over the coming months we see this lifting to 11.5-12.0Mb/d as the increase in drilling activity and higher energy company cash flows are reinvested to stabilize production volumes which are still declining for many producers.
Total Product Demand rose last week by 685Kb/d to 19.96Mb/d. Gasoline Demand rose by 254Kb/d to 9.48Mb/d. Jet Fuel Consumption rose 213Kb/d to 1.4Mb/d. So far this year overall demand for products is 5.8% above last year as we recover from the pandemic plunge. Motor Gasoline demand is up by 9.4% from last year but Jet Fuel remains a negative component, down 2.4% from a year ago. This may turn positive in the coming weeks as it appears that travel around the upcoming Memorial long weekend will see record airline travel. Cushing Inventories fell last week by 1.0Mb to 44.8Mb compared to 53.5Mb last year.
Baker Hughes Rig Data: The data for the week ending May 21st showed the US rig count rise by two rigs (up five rigs in the prior week). Canada had a decline of one rig (up four rigs in the prior week). Canadian activity is now up 176% from the pandemic lows of last year. There are 58 rigs working in Canada now compared to 21 rigs working last year. In the US there were 455 rigs active, up 43% from 318 rigs working a year ago. In the US they had an increase of four rigs drilling for oil to 356 rigs and this is up
50% from a year ago. The state with the biggest increase in rigs this week was Oklahoma.
Conclusion:
Over the next two months OPEC will increase production by 2.1Mb/d with latest industry reports showing them having increased production by 1.0Mb/d in May. With worldwide demand now around 95-96Mb/d we expect by year-end demand may rise to 97Mb/d, but not back to pre-pandemic levels of 100-101Mb/d forecast by some energy bulls. Goldman Sachs and Barclays are calling for US$80/b by Q4/21 if demand rises to over 100Mb/d.
Bearish pressure on crude prices:
- Vaccine hesitation and vaccine resistance is likely to delay herd immunity. Many individuals in the US who have their first shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine have not gone to get their second shot even though they are eligible. The US as of yesterday was at 591K deaths. Worldwide deaths have risen to 3.46M.
- Rising mutation caseloads in Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan are new outbreak areas. Japan’s ICU health care system is at capacity and their largest cities (Tokyo and Osaka) are facing rising case loads. There is increasing pressure to cancel the Olympic summer games. Vaccination rates in the country are extremely low at 5% inoculated so far. The US State Department has issued a travel advisor for the country.
- Iran is making progress to return to the UN nuclear deal and if an accord is completed by June, they could increase production quickly by 1Mb/d and over the next year by an additional 1Mb/d to lift production from 2.39Mb/d produced in April 2021. Iran last produced over 4Mb/d in 2016. A deal would lift current sanctions on Iran’s oil, banking and shipping sectors. Iran has a new 1,00Km – 1Mb/d pipeline coming on this month that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz. It is situated in the Gulf of Oman. It will make shipping crude cheaper to buyers in Asian countries.
Bullish pressure on crude prices:
- Rising vaccination levels across the US is lifting energy consumption.
- Weather impacts should start soon in the Gulf of Mexico which would necessitate shutting in some of the offshore production.
- Optimism over international travel, as restrictions are lifted, is gaining momentum and some forecasters expect global Jet Fuel demand will rise by 1.0Mb/d by year end. The exception is India which is seeing international flights cancelled due to the rapid spread of the disease.
- Vaccine passports (or certificates) are getting more support from countries, increasing the likelihood of a 2021 summer tourism industry in Europe. The UK may lead the way with passports and may start to issue them as early as next month.
CONCLUSION: We remain skeptical of the optimism about a full recovery in energy demand before year-end. The tug of war between the normal summer holiday travel demand and the 3-4Mb/d increase in crude oil supplies this year remains the key determinant of future energy consumption and crude oil prices.
WTI crude oil prices are down modestly today to US$65.62. A breach of USS$60/b would have negative implications. Technically a close below US$57.63/b (the early April low) would be very bearish and set up a decline to US$48-52/b.
Energy Stock Market: The S&P/TSX Energy Index trades currently at 125. A close below 111.00 (the mid-April low) should initiate the next sharp decline. An initial downside target after such a breach is the 100 area. The expected general stock market weakness would be the catalyst for the energy sector to lose its current momentum and back off meaningfully.
Subscribe to the Schachter Energy Report and receive access to our two monthly reports, all archived Webinars, Action Alerts, TOP PICK recommendations when the next BUY or SELL signal occurs, as well as our Quality Scoring System review of the 30 companies that we cover. We go over the markets in much more detail and highlight individual companies’ financial results in our reports. If you are interested in the energy industry this should be of interest to you.
We completed our review of 12 energy, energy service and infrastructure companies for our May Monthly SER which will be released this Friday May 28th. It will include reviews of all of the five Pipeline & Infrastructure companies we follow. If you want to access this report and to become a subscriber go to https://bit.ly/34iKcRt to subscribe.

- China plans to open two nuclear breeder reactors beginning in 2023.
- These reactors make weapons-grade plutonium as part of their operation.
- International scientists are worried about what this means for Chinese nuclear weapons.
On the tiny, nondescript island of Changbiao, in the Fujian province, the China National Nuclear Corporation is building two mysterious nuclear reactors that are drawing plenty of international attention—and concern.
The reactors, which are scheduled to power up in 2023 and 2026, are both a type called China Fast Reactor 600 (CFR-600). This kind of reactor is a “breeder,” meaning its nuclear reaction generates more fuel than it uses. And that’s what has scientists from around the world scratching their heads, according to a new report from Al Jazeera.
The goal with most nuclear power plants is to use as much of their fuel up as possible—not make more. That’s especially true when the reactor produces plutonium, which is easy to turn into nuclear weapons.

In the very first scene of HBO’s “Silicon Valley,” Big Head complains, “Money [is] flying all over Silicon Valley, but none of it ever seems to hit us.”
Well, Big Head, it might be time for a move to Ann Arbor, Raleigh, or Atlanta.
America’s VC landscape is shifting. Literally.
According to a new Crunchbase report, ~$161.5B of venture capital flowed into US companies in 2020.
What’s not surprising: California, Massachusetts, and New York made up 73.1% of that total, with California alone grabbing 52.2%.
Here’s what might surprise you: 14 states — including Colorado, Minnesota, and Washington — saw at least $1.5B in VC funding in 2020. Only 6 attracted that much in 2016.
With tech talent increasing and spreading across the country, secondary markets are getting hot (we previously covered VC funding in the midwest).
Especially for wolverines, tar heels, and peaches
VC growth in Michigan, North Carolina, and Georgia is on fire. Between 2016 and 2020:
- Michigan saw venture funding spike ~886% to $3.1B
- North Carolina saw it jump ~410% to $4.1B
- Georgia’s grew 142%+ to $2B
Some VCs are specifically focusing on entrepreneurial regions that don’t already have a TV show about them, like Panoramic with its new $300m fund.
