With oil price near $50,
resilient U.S. shale producers eye new chapter
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[June 20, 2016]
By Ernest Scheyder and Terry Wade
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Two years into the
worst oil price rout in a generation, large and mid-sized U.S.
independent producers are surviving and eyeing growth again as oil
nears $50 a barrel, confounding OPEC and Saudi Arabia with their
resiliency.
That shale giants Hess Corp, Apache Corp and more than 25 other
companies have beaten back OPEC's attempt to sideline them would
have been unthinkable just months ago, when oil plumbed $26 a barrel
and collapses were feared.
To regain market share, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries in late 2014 pumped more oil despite growing global
oversupply. It aimed to drive prices lower and force higher-cost
producers out of the market, with shale oil seen as especially
vulnerable.
The pain was acute. Industry revenue fell more than 30 percent in
2015 from the previous year, the U.S. drilling rig count dropped by
more than 70 percent from when oil was still above $100 per barrel,
stock valuations plunged and scores of small producers filed for
bankruptcy.
But so far no U.S. producer that pumps more than 100,000 barrels per
day (bpd) has gone bankrupt. The survival of these big producers
partly explains why overall U.S. production has slipped only about
10 percent since peaking at 9.69 million bpd.
Their agility - which required slashing costs in half while doubling
down on improved techniques to squeeze more oil from each new well -
is now allowing the industry to cautiously focus on growth again.
But this time, U.S. producers say they will stay focused on capital
returns, having abandoned a culture of maximizing production
regardless of costs.
OPEC and Saudi Arabia "thought that there would be major
capitulation and damage to U.S. shale producers as a result of the
deep downturn," said Les Csorba, a leadership consultant at Heidrick
& Struggles who works with shale executives. "But what happened was
that it actually created a new paradigm among U.S. producers to
transform their businesses."
Acquisition activity has picked up markedly in recent weeks, with
Devon Energy Corp <DVN.N> finding buyers for more than $2 billion in
non-core assets. The company is using part of that cash to boost its
capital budget by $200 million.
WPX Energy Inc, which spent more on acquisitions last year than any
U.S. oil company, sold 45 million new shares earlier this month,
planning to use the funds to drill new Texas wells.
"We're a leaner organization than we were before the price crash,"
said Rick Muncrief, WPX's chief executive.
True, costs were slashed in the height of the price downturn when
oil plumbed $26 per barrel in February and "there's a perception out
there that if commodity prices go back up, you're going to lose
those cost savings," Muncrief said.
But, he stressed, "that's simply not the case."
Industry consensus holds that costs for oilfield services - fracking
and the like - may rise in tandem with oil prices, though high-tech
advancements in sand, drilling and chemical technologies should
stick around.
"Real progress for us has come on the cost side," said John Christmann, Apache's
chief executive. "We plan to maintain a methodical approach to the cycle with a
focus on returns."
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The Elevation Resources drilling rig is shown at the Permian Basin
drilling site in Andrews County, Texas, U.S. on May 16, 2016.
REUTERS/Ann Saphir/File Photo
U.S. oil prices have recouped nearly half their losses from mid-2014 highs,
almost doubling from the 13-year lows hit in February to reach over $51 in early
June.
A year ago prices hit similar levels before plunging; oil executives are hoping
past is not prologue.
"People are not necessarily freaking out anymore," said Sam Xu, an investment
banker with CohnReznick Capital Market Securities LLC. "Instead of trying to
keep their heads above the water, they're now trying to get back in the game."
To be sure, some executives say a bit more is needed - at least $60 a barrel -
to ramp up drilling and fracking operations across most U.S. shale plays.
That attitude has been reflected in oil producers' capital budgets, which are
still billions below 2015 levels.
Hess has long said it will add rigs in North Dakota when oil prices hit that
mark, even though it is profitable in the state at $40.
"We need to see a period of stability in prices," Greg Hill, chief operating
officer at Hess, said. "We need to make sure it's not quicksand."
Some oil companies aren't ready to even acknowledge the $50 milestone as
relevant.
"We are head down and working and not ready to take any kind of victory lap,"
said Kristin Thomas, spokeswoman for Continental Resources Inc, North Dakota's
second-largest oil producer.
Others are moving ahead in the Bakken, Eagle Ford and Permian, considered the
cheapest and most-prolific U.S. shale oil fields.
"The Permian is set up for fairly explosive growth over the next several years,"
Scott Sheffield, CEO of Pioneer Natural Resources Co, said at a S&P Global
Platts conference. Pioneer this week said it would increase its rig fleet by 40
percent.
Still, most producers are moving slowly.
"People are going to be waiting to see if this $50 price sticks around," said
Muncrief, the WPX CEO.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder and Terry Wade; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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