Investors brace for poor U.S. shale earnings amid weak
oil and gas prices
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[October 28, 2019] By
Liz Hampton
(Reuters) - Investors are bracing for
weaker results from U.S. shale players in coming days as lower oil and
natural gas prices and cost-cutting measures have weighed on
third-quarter operations.
Major shale producers ConocoPhillips <COP.N> and Concho Resources <CXO.N>
this week kick off quarterly earnings reports for a group whipsawed this
year by volatile pricing and investor demands for improved returns. Oil
and gas producers have cut drilling and slashed jobs amid worries over
pricing outlooks.
U.S. oil prices are down 17% and natural gas is down about 31% from a
year ago, undercutting production increases. Costs of job cuts and
retiring debt also will pressure profit at some companies, analysts said
ahead of reports.
"I think we are moving from a growth to a value phase," said Brad Holly,
chief executive at Whiting Petroleum Corp <WLL.N> at a Denver oil
conference earlier this month.
Whiting, Devon Energy <DVN.N>, and PDC Energy <PDCE.O> each pared staff
in recent months as prices swooned. Cutbacks have spread across the
sector, with Halliburton <HAL.N>, Schlumberger <SLB.N>, and Patterson-UTI
Energy <PTEN.O> idling equipment.
Investors will be watching for shale productivity updates. Last quarter,
Concho Resources' <CXO.N> stock plunged 22% in a day after cutting its
production outlook, blaming well designs that hurt output.
OUTPUT GAINS 'DECELERATING'
Concho is expected to report earnings of 69 cents per share for the
quarter, down from $1.42 a year ago. Top U.S. independent Conoco is
expected to post earnings per share of 75 cents, compared with $1.36 a
year ago, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
U.S. oil companies have flooded the market with crude this year, capping
prices at about the mid-$50 a barrel range. Oil production averaged 11.8
million barrels per day (bpd) in July, the latest monthly figure, up
915,000 bpd from the same period last year, according to U.S. government
figures.
"We will continue to see growth, but it will be decelerated, and
meaningfully decelerated from where it has been for the last three
years," said Bobby Tudor, chairman of Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co, in an
interview this month on the sidelines of a conference. He based the
forecast on U.S. oil at about $50 a barrel.
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A general view of a refinery in Hobbs, New Mexico, U.S. September
18, 2019. REUTERS/Adria Malcolm
U.S. oil output is projected to rise by 900,000 bpd next year to 13.2 million
bpd, down from a gain of 1.3 million bpd day this year, according to a U.S.
Energy Information Administration forecast.
With prices in the mid-50s, top shale-service provider Halliburton last week
warned U.S. customer activity would continue to decline this year, and outlined
plans for a new round of cost cuts.
RESTRAINT CAME 'TOO LATE'
Halliburton and other hydraulic fracturing providers have taken 100 U.S.
fracking fleets that complete oil and gas wells off the market, "with a portion
of that to never return," consultancy Primary Vision wrote last week.
"We expect 2020 (spending) plans to be focused around maintenance capital," or
spending that supports existing output, said Bernadette Johnson, vice president
of market intelligence at consultancy Enverus.
Among major shale producers, EOG Resources <EOG.N> is forecast to report per
share earnings of $1.13, down from $1.75 a year earlier. Pioneer Natural
Resources Co <PXD.N> could post earnings of $1.98 per share, down 9 cents,
according to Refinitiv IBES.
Continental Resources <CLR.N> is projected to earn 47 cents per share, down from
90 cents a year earlier. Its shares have fallen to about $29.16 from roughly
$54.15 a year ago.
"People are ignoring shale names now and they're sort of disgusted with them
almost," said Rohan Murphy, an analyst with Allianz Global Investors in London,
adding that their push for capital discipline came "almost a bit too late."
Graphic: U.S. oil producers' shares fall even as output continues to rise,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/OIL-RESULTS/0H001QXF1933/index.html
(Reporting by Liz Hampton in Denver; Additional reporting by Jennifer Hiller in
Houston; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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