There's a 0% chance that will happen.
Private equity pulled all their money out of Oklahoma. There isn't another company O&G that could grow into the space, no one is cutting the checks to grow an O&G company right now.
CHAP signed a long term lease on the building. If they merge (most likely) or get bought (for really cheap), they'll just shutter the doors and it will sit empty.
I know who is likely going to buy it and they will lease a few of the floors back to Chaparral. Will probably be announced in the next few weeks. There is plenty of space in the building and they are not leaving it unless something odd happens and an owner occupant (other than the one I know of) pops up and can fill the entire building.
If it's who I think it is, it's actually multiple companies under one umbrella. They won't be able to fill all the empty space but will be able to take a good portion of one wing of the building. Chaparral would get the top 2 floors and the rest would be leaseable space.
Well the data says it’s absolutely diversified.
Oil prices crashed in 2014 then stabilized, but never recovered. employment at okc’s O&G companies has shrunk and keeps shrinking, and yet...
Sales tax revenue in okc continues to grow, the city’s GDP growth slowed way down, never shrank, and is now back to growing at rapid rate.
The only thing really struggling is office space which is largely because O&G’s have been forced to get very lean.
So you’re wrong.
Page 21. We shrank one year in 2016 and rebounded despite the primary industry in the city experiencing the worst crash in a generation. Next tech bubble and Silicon Valley wont escape that easily.
https://www.greateroklahomacity.com/...019_online.pdf
Aerospace had become one of the top employers around. Boeing was named #1 employer in the state:
https://www.boeing.com/features/2019...ers-06-20.page
I only saw Haliburton in top 30 employers list from 2018 (Devon wqas 71st):
https://okcommerce.gov/wp-content/up...oyers-List.pdf
What I see on that list is a lot of tax consumers and not very many tax revenue producers, doesn't speak well for our economy. When most of your top 30 employers are government, Wal Mart, and gambling , that's not a good sign.
How many of those employers on your list pay anything like a Gross Production Tax ?
Or creates new value that did not exist before ?
Tribal gaming is nothing but a transfer of value. It brings very little new money into the state. Probably, more money leaves the state , taken by the companies who actually manage the casinos. Patrons at casinos would spend that money somewhere else if they weren't gambling. It just takes from a variety of sectors and creates jobs in another sector.
And ya really need to find a breakdown by industry. Oil and gas production is not labor intensive. Its drilling new wells that creates the jobs.
What evidence do you have that "probably more money leaves the state, taken by the companies who actually manage the casinos"?
Probably? That's quite an assumption to be making.
None.
Just common sense.
Is Oklahoma a destination for out of state gamblers ? Maybe Durant or some other border towns.
These Tribes hire management firms. And I'm sure they're getting a big hunk of the profits.
But what if I'm wrong ? What diff does it make ? The point remains, that money spent for gambling, comes at the expense of other sectors of the state economy. We are not Las Vegas , where people travel here from all over to gamble.
And all it takes is Texas legalizing gambling and the competition really heats up. Its not an industry that we should be hanging our hat on.
And btw, even Boeing's presence here, is dependent upon Fed Govt spending. Its new money for our state economy, but nationally its just more govt spending, that comes from tax money taken from somebody else.
The same way gambling benefits local economies, but does little for the state as a whole.
So you saw Chickasaw Nation as #4 on that list (the only other gaming-related one was Muscogee Nation at the bottom of the list) and went on this posting tirade? Gamble much? lol You bring up GPT as some saving grace of the O&Gs. What was that % again? Again, the question was about diversification of our economy, not who pays how much in tax.
You do realize Boeing has international work that's not dependent on our Govt spending, right?
P.S. I have a feeling that arguing online is one of your hobbies.
Yeah, will proove it. hahaha, there's a lot of casinos in this state that are not built for Texans.
And still, whenever Texas legalize gambling, and that day is coming , they have legislation to do that introduced in their state legislature every year, then Thackerville and Durant will become ghost towns.
Sports betting is going to be legal nationally, probably sooner than later. Texas won't hold out.
Maybe so, but in the past I'd heard Harrah's as a company who was contracting with the Tribes. I've got no idea about the Chickasaw operation.
But again, this is a small part of the point I was making. You're draggin me into the weeds. I may very well be wrong, but gambling is not something healthy for our economy. This same reasoning, is why the Texas legislature has not legalized gambling.
And btw, the demise of oil and gas , has been greatly exaggerated.
Outside of some fantastic boom in construction of nuclear generation, this dream of an electric economy is just that , a dream.
And it would take years and years to construct nuclear generation.
As far as Oklahoma's oil and gas sector, I'd be far more concerned with depletion of existing reserves, than this move away from fossil fuels to combat climate change.
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