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						Shale's growing profits at the mercy of OPEC cuts and 
						Trump's tweets
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		 [December 05, 2018]   
		By Jennifer Hiller 
 HOUSTON (Reuters) - The recent nosedive in 
		crude prices came just as shale producers had started delivering healthy 
		returns after years of heavy spending to boost production and market 
		share.
 
 The shift has pleased investors who had grown weary of waiting for a 
		payoff while watching the frenetic west Texas shale boom make the United 
		States the world's top oil producer and a major exporter.
 
 The 29 percent drop in U.S. oil prices since October now threatens those 
		improved margins, and sustained prices below $50 could dent the value of 
		shale reserves, which banks use to determine borrowing power.
 
 Activity in the largest U.S. oil field could fall 10 to 20 percent next 
		year if prices stay down, said Steven Pruett, chief executive of shale 
		producer Elevation Resources LLC. The price retreat sparked a sell-off 
		of shale firms' shares and another setback could sour investors on the 
		sector for years.
 
 The dynamic leaves shale producers hoping for a rescue in the form of 
		production cuts from The Organization of the Petroleum Producing 
		Countries (OPEC) when it meets on Thursday - and at odds with U.S. 
		President Donald Trump, who has pushed OPEC to keep the taps wide open.
 
 Although Trump has generally been a boisterous booster of fossil-fuel 
		firms, he has ridiculed the prospect of OPEC production cuts as "ripping 
		off the rest of the world" by artificially inflating consumer fuel 
		prices.
 
 In November, Trump praised Saudi Arabia on Twitter for high production 
		that helped push oil prices down about 30 percent to near $50, calling 
		it "like a big Tax Cut."
 
		
		 
		
 Such tweets are an "irritant" to a U.S. oil industry trying to solidify 
		its profitable position.
 
 Trump's "leaning on" Saudi Arabia, the most influential OPEC nation, 
		"has had a great effect," Pruett said.
 
 "To me, it's a lot of meddling," he said.
 
 Trump's campaign against OPEC cuts comes after he stood by the kingdom 
		and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman despite U.S. politicians 
		calling for sanctions over the October killing of journalist Jamal 
		Khashoggi at Riyadh's consulate in Istanbul. Prince Salman wants to 
		avoid confrontation with Trump, Saudi watchers say, including over oil 
		production cuts and prices.
 
 While shale producers have made strides in recent years at turning 
		profits with lower oil prices, they are nearing a threshold where some 
		would scale back investment, said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price 
		Futures Group in Chicago.
 
 "The reality is a lot of them get scared at $50, and their bankers get 
		scared at $50," said Flynn. "They want OPEC to make a cut, and they kind 
		of want Donald Trump to stop tweeting about oil."
 
 U.S. oil production will rise 17 percent this year to average daily 
		output of 10.9 million bpd, and hit 12.06 million bpd by mid 2019, 
		according to U.S. government estimates. After years of increasing 
		capital spending, companies including Anadarko Petroleum Corp <APC.N> 
		plan to freeze or cut those budgets, passing the savings to investors.
 
 Even if OPEC pulls back and global prices stabilize at current levels, 
		it may not be enough for shale to regain investor favor, said Bruce 
		Campbell, president of advisers Campbell, Lee & Ross Investment 
		Management Inc. The firm owns Royal Dutch Shell shares because of its 
		strong dividend and balance sheet, but no longer sees a reason to invest 
		in shale.
 
 Shale companies can cut costs further, "but it takes 12 to 18 months to 
		roll through the system" and get profits rising again, he said. Without 
		higher crude prices, it will be tough for investors "to find a place to 
		get excited about," Campbell said.
 
 
		
		 
		SHALE RESILIENCE
 
 Since the 2014-2016 price war between OPEC and shale producers - when 
		soaring global supply pushed per-barrel prices down into the $20s - west 
		Texas shale drillers have learned to wring profits at prices as low as 
		$38 a barrel, down from about $71 in 2014, according to consultancy 
		Rystad Energy.
 
 But breakeven prices in other U.S. fields range from about $43 to $48 
		per barrel, not far from November's low.
 
		
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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/File Photo 
            
			 
Meanwhile, Middle East producers' costs are about $11 a barrel in Iraq, less 
than $17 in Saudi Arabia, and less than $21 in Kuwait, according to Rystad.
 These countries, however, need much higher prices to finance their state 
spending. In Saudi Arabia, crude would have to average $85-87 a barrel to cover 
this year's state budget, an International Monetary Fund official said.
 
 The U.S. industry is still expanding the use of more efficient drilling 
techniques, and oil majors' BP Plc <BP.L>, Chevron Corp <CVX.N>, and Exxon Mobil 
Corp <XOM.N> are expanding shale operations and building pipeline infrastructure 
to keep production rising.
 
“Shale is a scale business,” said Shawn Reynolds, a portfolio manager at 
investment firm VanEck.
 He sees an industry just now poised to move out of its costly development phase 
and into what Reynolds calls "harvest mode," pulling profit from past 
investments.
 
 But a continued price decline would threaten recent robust earnings. Last 
quarter, ConocoPhillips <COP.N> profit rose four-fold over a year earlier aided 
by cost cuts that "significantly improved our resilience to low prices," Chief 
Executive Ryan Lance said during an earnings call last month.
 
Anadarko <APC.N> swung to a profit and said it expects to increase production 10 
percent to 14 percent next year, assuming "$50 oil,” said CEO Al Walker.
 Other producers are counting on a replay of 2016, when OPEC cut output and 
prices gradually increased.
 
 "I've been through it before," Bob Watson, CEO of Texas shale producer Abraxas 
Petroleum Corp <AXAS.O>, said in an interview. He has told his employees not to 
worry about the price: "It will come back. You just need to keep executing."
 
 Watson, like other large shale companies, used financial derivatives to lock in 
some of its future production at $56 a barrel, a move that lets it ride out the 
recent drop barring a sustained change.
 
LESSONS FROM THE PRICE WAR
 Non-OPEC oil output will rise by 2.3 million bpd this year while oil demand 
should grow by a 1.3 million bpd next year, projects the International Energy 
Agency, which advises major oil consumers on energy policy. That could lead 
again to a market awash in oil, lowering global prices.
 
 
 OPEC this week must decide whether the global economy will need more oil or 
less. After months of producing well below the group's target, group leaders 
increased production last summer and by October had added nearly 400,000 barrels 
per day over September. Russia also increased its production by about 460,000 
bpd above its cap.
 
 "OPEC realizes that in the last downturn, in an effort to grab market share, 
they got nowhere. They ended up losing market share to some extent," said Muqsit 
Ashraf, senior managing director for energy at consultancy Accenture Strategy.
 
 One lesson from the last price war is shale can expand production even at prices 
that hurt OPEC members' budgets, said Karr Ingham, a Texas oil and gas 
economist.
 
 Companies in the Permian Basin pumped 1.6 million bpd in June 2014 when prices 
peaked at $107 and output rose to nearly 2 million bpd two years later as prices 
fell to $26, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
 
 "OPEC can wait from now until kingdom come, but they won't get … a production 
decline" from the Permian field, Ingham said. Break-even costs for producing oil 
in major U.S. shale basins - https://tmsnrt.rs/2QqA96E What it costs Middle East 
oil producers to produce a barrel - https://tmsnrt.rs/2DSOOki
 
 (Reporting by Jennifer Hiller; Editing by Gary McWilliams and Brian Thevenot)
 
				 
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