Bankruptcy looms over U.S. energy industry, from oil
fields to pipelines
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[April 23, 2020] By
Jessica Resnick-Ault and David French
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. shale producers,
refiners and pipeline companies are scrambling for cash and face likely
restructuring as they struggle under heavy debt loads and a dual
supply/demand shock in the worst crisis the oil industry has faced.
Fuel demand has tumbled roughly 30% worldwide due to the coronavirus
pandemic, and just as the health crisis worsened a price war between
Russia and Saudi Arabia flooded markets with crude. The industry was
already struggling to satisfy investors unhappy with weak returns, even
as the United States surged to become the world's largest oil producer
in the last few years.
That perilous position was before U.S. prices crashed deep into negative
territory on Monday, as much as $38 per barrel in the red. This sudden
rout came despite substantial spending and output cuts having already
been announced by U.S. producers, and reflected a price environment well
below levels that companies and advisors had modeled in worst-case
scenarios, according to energy lawyers.
Approximately half of the top 60 independent U.S. oil producers will
likely need to review options for securing more liquidity, according to
energy lawyers at Haynes and Boone.
"The reverberations from this price collapse will be felt throughout the
industry and by everyone who provides services to the industry," said
Buddy Clark, an Houston-based partner at the firm.
Companies that used debt to fund acquisitions before prices crashed,
such as oil giant Occidental Petroleum Corp <OXY.N>, are focusing on
placating shareholders and preserving cash.
Numerous midstream companies backed by private equity are in danger of
bankruptcy, according to some of the more than a dozen industry and
financial sources Reuters spoke to for this article, while large banks
are preparing to become owners of oil and gas fields as they seize
energy assets.
One midstream company, Salt Creek Midstream, which operates in the
Delaware basin in Texas, had already hired Jefferies Financial Group <JEF.N>
and law firm Kirkland & Ellis for debt advice before the week's events,
according to three sources aware of the matter, speaking on condition of
anonymity to discuss non-public information.
Salt Creek and its advisers declined to comment, as did private equity
investors Ares Management Corp <ARES.N> and ARM Energy.
More shale producers are expected to seek bankruptcy protection in
coming weeks, industry and banking sources say, following Whiting
Petroleum <WLL.N>, which announced such steps earlier this month. Many
small and mid-sized producers, including Chesapeake Energy Corp <CHK.N>,
have retained debt advisers.
The forecast loan default rate for 2020 among energy companies is 18%,
according to Fitch Ratings, while nearly 20% of all energy corporate
bonds are trading below 70 cents on the dollar, indicating distress,
according to data from MarketAxess.
Occidental hoped asset sales would help reduce its debt pile, which
stood at nearly $39 billion at the end of 2019 after its massive
acquisition of Anadarko Petroleum last year. It has since cut costs
twice and slashed its prized dividend.
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Pump jacks operate at sunset in Midland, Texas, U.S., February 11,
2019. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
PRODUCERS AND PIPELINES
Privately held pipeline operators are considered the most vulnerable
among midstream companies, bankers said. As shale producers hit
bankruptcy, they're expected to try to use court proceedings to exit
pipeline contracts which charge transport fees based on oil and gas
prices well above current levels, according to Buddy Clark and Charles
Beckham, another Haynes and Boone partner.
Privately owned Glass Mountain LLC earlier this month sued troubled
producer Chesapeake Energy for allegedly defaulting on an oil
transportation contract, according to court documents.
Midstream companies are also threatened by a slow fall in production, as
wells are being plugged due to poor market conditions. Based on company
estimates, at least 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) of U.S. production
cuts have been announced, and that cuts off transportation fees earned
by pipeline companies.
A number of these midstream operators borrowed heavily to finance
pipeline systems, built to support producers developing new, costlier
shale plays when oil prices were higher, but are no longer profitable.
Debt belonging to private midstream operators is trading at distressed
levels, with many between 40 and 50 cents on the dollar, such as Brazos
Midstream, a Delaware Basin operator whose long-term debt was downgraded
to CCC+ by Fitch Ratings last week, a rating described as implying
substantial risks.
REFINING
Oil refiner PBF Energy <PBF.N> built up a network of six U.S. refineries
over a decade, including this year's nearly $1 billion purchase of a San
Francisco-area plant. With the market's slide, the entire company is
currently worth less by capitalisation than that purchase.
PBF last month said it would sell hydrogen gas plants for $530 million
to raise cash. That sale "solves some short-term problems for them,"
said one person familiar with the transaction, but cautioned that this
alone will not stabilize the company unless fuel demand begins to
recover. The person declined to be identified because the matter was not
public.
The company declined to comment.
demand, however, is down by roughly 25% in the United States, and
oversupply is expected to linger for months.
An April survey of energy producers by the Federal Reserve Bank of
Kansas City found nearly 40% would be insolvent within a year if oil
prices remained around $30 a barrel. U.S. crude prices closed under $14
a barrel on Wednesday.
"The restructuring guys are extremely busy. I don't think they'll be
busy for just this year - I think it's a multi-year process," James West
at investment bank Evercore ISI told investors on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Jessica Resnick-Ault and David French; Additional
reporting by Kate Duguid; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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