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						Funds pull back from 
						Permian as U.S. shale oil firms go into overdrive 
						
		 
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		 [June 16, 2017] 
		By Julia Simon 
		 
		
		NEW 
		YORK (Reuters) - Cash, people and equipment are pouring into the 
		prolific Permian shale basin in Texas as business booms in the largest 
		U.S. oilfield. But one group of investors is heading the other way - 
		concerned that shale may become a victim of its own success. 
		 
		The speed of the recovery in the U.S. shale industry in the past year 
		has surprised oil investors after a global supply glut led to a two-year 
		crude price slump and bankrupted many shale firms. 
		 
		Eight prominent hedge funds have reduced the size of their positions in 
		ten of the top shale firms by over $400 million, concerned producers are 
		pumping oil so fast they will undo the nascent recovery in the industry 
		after OPEC and some non-OPEC producers agreed to cut supply in November. 
		 
		The funds, with assets of $286 billion and substantial energy holdings, 
		cut exposure to firms that are either pure-play Permian companies or 
		that derive significant revenues from the region, according to an 
		analysis of their investments based on Reuters data. 
		 
		The Permian, which stretches across West Texas and eastern New Mexico, 
		produces about 2.5 million barrels of oil per day (bpd), accounting for 
		more than a quarter of overall U.S. crude production. 
						
		
		  
						
		"We'll have to see if these U.S. producers have the discipline to not go 
		crazy and keep prices where they keep making money," said Gary Bradshaw, 
		portfolio manager at Dallas-based investment firm Hodges Capital 
		Management. 
		 
		Hodges Capital owns shares of Permian play firms including Diamondback 
		Energy Inc, RSP Permian Inc and Callon Petroleum Co. Bradshaw's firm has 
		maintained its exposure to the Permian. 
		 
		There is no sign that shale producers will restrain production. They 
		redeployed rigs and personnel quickly since prices began strengthening 
		in 2016 and made shale profitable again; rig counts have risen by 40 
		percent this year in the Permian, which accounts for about half of all 
		U.S. onshore oil rigs. 
		 
		Hedge funds pulled back in the first quarter, according to the most 
		recently available regulatory filings, and the stocks have continued to 
		struggle as oil prices have come under renewed pressure. 
		 
		The value of these funds' positions in the 10 Permian companies declined 
		by 14 percent, to $2.66 billion in the first quarter, the most recent 
		data available, from $3.08 billion in the fourth quarter of 2016. 
		 
		Hedge funds have continued to reduce their exposure to energy stocks in 
		the second quarter, said Mark Connors, global head of portfolio and risk 
		advisory at Credit Suisse, though he could not provide figures specific 
		to shale companies. 
		 
		MARGINS SQUEEZED 
		 
		Fund managers interviewed expressed concern that volatile oil prices 
		along with rising service costs and acreage prices are not reflected in 
		overly optimistic projections for the Permian. 
		 
		The funds analyzed include Pointstate Capital LP, a $25 billion fund 
		with 16 percent in energy shares, and Arosa Capital Management, a $2.1 
		billion fund with more than 90 percent of assets in energy stocks. 
		Pointstate and Arosa declined comment. 
						
		
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			An oil pump is seen operating in the Permian Basin near Midland, 
			Texas, U.S. on May 3, 2017. Picture taken May 3, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Ernest Scheyder/File Photo 
            
			  
"Margins will continue to be squeezed by a 15 to 20 percent increase in service 
costs in the Permian basin," said Michael Roomberg, portfolio manager of the 
Miller/Howard Drill Bit to Burner Tip Fund. 
A 
Reuters analysis of 10 Permian producers, including several that almost 
exclusively operate in Texas, carry an average price-to-earnings ratio of about 
35, compared with the overall energy sector's P/E ratio of about 17.8. 
 
"These are not great returns, but the problem is the market is rewarding them," 
said an analyst at one of the hedge funds on condition of anonymity, because he 
was not authorized to speak to the press. 
 
Concerns about lofty land prices are driving some of the pullback by hedge 
funds, according to two fund analysts who could not speak on the record. Values 
for Permian acreage have increased 30 percent from two years ago, according to 
Detring Energy Advisors in Houston. 
 
The 10 Permian stocks analyzed have, on average, dropped 18 percent so year, 
compared with the broader S&P 500 energy sector's 13 percent fall. 
Permian production is expected to reach 2.47 million bpd by July, a 330,000 bpd 
increase from the beginning of the year, according to the U.S. Energy 
Department. 
 
Last month the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and 
other key producers, including Russia, extended a historic output cut agreement 
to combat a global glut. 
 
However, production from non-OPEC countries, especially the U.S., continues to 
rise and weigh on prices. U.S. crude prices <CLc1> on Wednesday hit a six-month 
low just above $44 per barrel. 
  
Reuters analysis shows many shale companies reduced hedges in the first quarter, 
leaving them vulnerable to falling oil prices. 
 
Still, fund managers say compared to other U.S. plays, the Permian still has the 
lowest break-even costs. 
 
"In terms of the time horizon, the economics of the Permian are so good they’re 
going to keep on drilling," said Colin Davies, senior analyst at oil services 
company AB Bernstein. 
 
(Editing by David Gaffen, Simon Webb and Marguerita Choy) 
				 
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