GSI Banner
  • Free Access
  • Contributors
  • Membership Levels
  • Video
  • Origins
  • Sponsors
  • My Account
  • Sign In
  • Join Now

  • Free Access
  • Contributors
  • Membership Levels
  • Video
  • Origins
  • Sponsors
  • Contact

© 2025 Grey Swan Investment Fraternity

  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Whitelist Us
Beneath the Surface

The Power of Combining Two World-Changing Technologies

Loading ...Andrew Packer

October 2, 2024 • 5 minute, 47 second read


AIfrackingOil

The Power of Combining Two World-Changing Technologies

Andrew Packer, Grey Swan Investment Fraternity

Weld County, Colorado

It’s late September in Colorado. The voice of Denver’s mayor greets me at the airport, suggesting I take in the fall foliage in the mountains.

But my final destination is in another direction. To the northeast of Denver isn’t the verdant green mountains. It’s the sparse scrubland of the prairie, at this time of year dry and parched. It’s also 93 degrees, warmer than my home in Florida.

Half an hour south of Wyoming, and less than an hour west of Nebraska, this part of Colorado isn’t picturesque enough to make the pages of the travel brochures.

It’s also a part of the state that wants to be anywhere else but Colorado. In 2013, the Weld County commissioners looked at seceding and creating a new state. In 2021, the county proposed that it join Wyoming.

Given that Weld County is home to about 330,000, such a move would increase Wyoming’s population by more than 50%.

Why is this part of the state so restless?

It’s likely because it’s sitting on top of some massive oil and natural gas formations.

Meanwhile, the state of Colorado, which was founded in part from a gold rush in 1858-1859, has created the most stringent environmental regulations in the country when it comes to mineral extraction.

It hasn’t banned oil and natural gas extraction. But it does require that resources are produced free of carbon emissions. The standards are so high that companies operating in Colorado often reach out to counterparts in Norway, which has a similar high level of environmental consideration.

So there’s a quiet transformation taking place in the Mile High State. And you wouldn’t know it driving by some flat, dusty and desolate roads in the prairie that marks the Eastern part of the state.

There’s no obvious candlestick flares like you might see at rigs in West Texas. And no gushers like in the opening of There Will Be Blood.

But it’s a combination of two tech trends unlike any other.

The Tech Trend Keeping Gas Prices Cheap

There’s been a massive boom underway over the past few years. Billions of dollars have been spent on a new technology that can revolutionize the way we look at the world. It’s making early investors fortunes.

That may sound like an elevator pitch for artificial intelligence. But it’s really just as applicable to fracking technology, especially horizontal fracking.

This technology allows oil and gas companies to drill for resources, and extract them over a range of miles.

Fracking technology unfolded in the early 2000s. The other part of the equation, creating the ability to create liquefied natural gas (LNG) for export, occurred in the early 2010s.

Both constituted a tech boom that we’re still benefiting from today. In total dollars it may not rival the AI or internet boom, but it’s keeping energy costs down and rethinking the scarcity mindset that has often prevailed.

The “peak oil” fearmongers, looking at production charts, failed to account for the possibility of a new technology that would render their models obsolete.

Yes, we’ll still have the occasional oil shortage, but for solvable, short-term reasons. But fundamentally, the more oil we’ve pumped out over the decades, the more we’ve found.

These advancements in the energy markets have been largely overlooked. Fracking allows oil fields to remain productive for decades after they would have been exhausted by conventional means. And America is swimming in natural gas, so being able to export it to Europe or Asia where demand (and prices) are higher has been a huge boom.

The site I visited, at (full disclosure) the invitation of Prairie Operating Company (PROP), estimated that the oil field they’re drilling for today will produce crude for 30 years, “at the current level of technology,” according to the site foreman.

Turn Your Images On

Fracking technology has truly been a revolution, and it’s a boom that has a long lead time to play out. But there’s another technology that’s making each part of the process more efficient.

A Skeptic Converted

In June, Goldman Sachs released an Insight named: Gen AI, Too Much Spend, Too Little Impact?

The report raised a lot of concerns that could fall under the Grey Swan purview. Essentially, for all the billions being spent on AI technologies, where were the results?

It’s certainly too early to tell. Internet stocks peaked and crashed before we had streaming video, online banking, shared document drives, and other key tools we use today.

But the article has added to some recent skepticism, including my own.

Traveling over the past few weeks, however, I’ve seen how AI tools are being employed in everything from corporate document management to wealth advisory portfolio structures … and now to the oilfield.

Yes, AI has gotten into some pretty remote parts of the world. Today, AI can use seismographic and topographical data, oil company records dating back decades, and determine not just where to drill, but the best spot to drill to within a few feet.

When you’re tunneling through 6,500 feet of rock to get to oil, precision can lead to far better results than just being approximately right.

And with fracking, one vertical pipeline can split off into multiple horizontal pipelines, for as far as 2-3 miles out.

With AI, energy companies have truly moved past the costly trial-and-error stage of drilling that has ruined many a wildcatter.

And that’s the real power of AI. Not some big “here it is” moment. Or the creation of a single Skynet-like AI that decides humanity is a threat that needs to be eliminated.

Instead, the power of AI is a tool that allows companies to find ways to complete a process 5-10% better. And doing it across as many processes as possible.

Turn Your Images On

There are hundreds of steps that need to happen even before the first hole is drilled. And afterwards, capping the site and restoring the environment to as much of its original state as possible.

Of course, not everything can be automated.

It’s hot work in the 93 degree heat, especially when you’re wearing full overalls, steel-toed boots, and a hard hat. The workers live on site, working 12 hours at a time (6AM to 6PM or vice versa) for 20 days, then get a full 10 days off. Then it happens again.

These are the unsung heroes of America’s energy revolution. But thanks to fracking and AI, America’s struggle with energy independence is won. And energy companies are taking advantage of every tool available to keep it that way.

Technology will keep the oil flowing. And right now, oil looks a little too cheap. It could be poised for an upside move, likely after the election. It may be time to allocate some money to this unloved commodity now. ~~Andrew Packer, Grey Swan Investment Fraternity


Pablo Hill: An Unmistakable Pattern in Copper

December 8, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

As copper flowed into the United States, LME inventories thinned and backwardation steepened. Higher U.S. pricing, tariff protection, and lower political risk made American warehouses the most attractive destination for metal. Each new shipment strengthened the spread.

The arbitrage, once triggered, became self-reinforcing. Traders were not participating in theory; they were responding to the physical incentives in front of them.

The United States had quietly become the marginal buyer of the world’s most important industrial metal. China, long the gravitational center of global copper demand, found itself on the outside.

Pablo Hill: An Unmistakable Pattern in Copper
Bears on the Prowl

December 8, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

Under the frost-crusted shrubs, the bears are sniffing around for scraps of bloody meat.

They smell the subtle rot of credit stress, central-bank desperation, and debt that’s beginning to steam in the cold. They’re not charging — not yet. But they’re present. Watching. Testing the doors.

Retail investors, last in line, await the Fed’s final announcement of the year on Wednesday. Then the central planners of the world get their turn: the Bank of England, Bank of Japan, and the European Central Bank.

Treasuries just suffered their worst week since June. And in Japan — the quiet godfather of global liquidity — something fundamental is breaking.

Silver continues its blistering ascent. Gold and bitcoin have settled in at $4,200 and $92,000, respectively.

Bears on the Prowl
How To Guarantee Higher Prices

December 8, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

It’s absurd, really, for any politician to be talking about “affordability.”

The data is clear. If higher prices are your goal, let the government “fix” them.

Mandates, paperwork, and busybodies telling you what you can and can’t do – it’s not a surprise why costs add up.

In contrast, if you want lower prices, do nothing– zilch. Let the market work.

How To Guarantee Higher Prices
Gideon Ashwood: The Bondquake in Tokyo: Why Japan’s Shock Is Just the Beginning

December 5, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

For 30 years, Japan was the land where interest rates went to die.

The Bank of Japan used yield-curve control to keep long-term rates sedated. Traders joked that shorting Japanese bonds was the “widow-maker trade.”

Not anymore.

On November 20, 2025, everything changed. Quietly, but decisively.

The Bank of Japan finally pulled the plug on decades of easy money. Negative rates were removed. Yield-curve control was abandoned. The policy rate was lifted to a 17-year high.

Suddenly, global markets had to reprice something they had ignored for years.

What happens when the world’s largest creditor nation stops exporting cheap capital and starts pulling it back home?

The answer came fast. Bond yields in Europe and the United States began climbing. The Japanese yen strengthened sharply. Wall Street faltered.

Gideon Ashwood: The Bondquake in Tokyo: Why Japan’s Shock Is Just the Beginning