US Shale Producers Curb 2019 Spending

By Devika Krishna Kumar and Jennifer Hiller
Friday, December 21, 2018

U.S. shale producers are slamming the brakes on next year's drilling with crude prices off 40 percent and mounting fears of oversupply, paring budgets that in some cases were set only weeks earlier.

The reversal is alarming because blistering growth in shale fields has propelled U.S. crude output 16 percent to about 10.9 million barrels per day for 2018, above Saudi Arabia and Russia. Production has been expected to rise 11 percent more in 2019 as large oil firms and independents added wells this year.

Shale producer Centennial Resource Development on Thursday joined rivals Diamondback Energy, and Parsley Energy in canceling drilling rig additions next year. Centennial, led by shale pioneer Mark Papa, withdrew its 2020 production target and canceled plans to add 2.5 drilling rigs, citing market weakness.

Right now, shale prices are close to break even levels. U.S. crude futures for 2019, based on an average of the year's monthly contracts, this week dropped below $50 a barrel, near the $46-$50-per-barrel level that shale producers in the Permian Basin, the largest oil field in the United States, need to cover their costs.

The price drop is "a shock," said John Roby, chief executive of Dallas, Texas-based oil producer Teal Natural Resources LLC. "A lot of people are cutting back development programs and cutting rigs," he said.

On Friday, U.S. crude slipped below $46 a barrel.

Centennial said in a securities filing it could no longer stand by its 2020 projections or add rigs next year "in light of the current macro environment." Just six weeks ago, it forecast 2020 output of 65,000 bpd with "attractive" returns based on a U.S. oil price of $75 a barrel.

Centennial's Papa was not available for comment.

"Realized pricing in the Permian Basin is near levels not seen since the end of 2016 while service costs have increased by about 35 percent during the same time period," said Travis Stice, CEO of Diamondback. The company cut three rigs, and plans to operate 18 to 22 rigs next year, down from 24 now.

"If commodity prices continue to decline, we will further reduce activity to match our budget to expected annual operating cash flow," Stice said in a statement.

Goodrich Petroleum Corp this week also cut its 2019 capital spending plan by $40 million and Abraxas Petroleum Corp said it has scrapped a $108 million budget draft and will release a new one early in the year. Ring Energy also disclosed plans to cut one of its two drilling rigs.

Weaker oil prices are squeezing companies and increasing borrowing costs. Investors have sold shares in companies that increased their drilling budgets, pressuring for cuts.

This year's shale expansion by oil majors Exxon Mobil and Chevron also has helped drive up service costs for smaller companies working in West Texas, further pressuring margins.

The shale cutbacks are the first of what is expected to be a wave of companies shedding rigs and slashing spending budgets, said Matthew Lemme, a portfolio manager with investment firm Cushing Asset Management.

"You can’t stick your head in the sand and pretend that oil hasn't fallen 20 bucks in a couple of months," Lemme said.

The message that investors continue to send oil and gas producers is: "Stay within cash flow no matter what the oil price is," Lemme said.

That conservative view of budgets will mean additional rigs and service crews that hydraulically fracture shale wells will be idled, slowing North American production growth in 2019, Lemme said.

The number of active drilling rigs has dropped to the lowest since October, but producers in the Permian Basin have banked a record number of drilled wells waiting to be completed and tied to pipelines. That inventory could be tapped quicker than having to drill new wells.

"Shale companies outside the Permian appear to face greater financial distress, and we think they would need to scale back activity more were prices to stay low," Standard Chartered said in a note.


(Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar and Jennifer Hiller; editing by Grant McCool)

Categories: Finance Shale Oil & Gas Drilling Production North America Shale

Related Stories

One Shelf Drilling Rig Up for New Job in India, Other for Disposal

Thailand's PTT to Buy LNG from Glenfarne's Alaska LNG Project

Fugro Lands Deepwater Gas Field Job in Southeast Asia

BW Opal FPSO Vessel set for Work off Australia

Indonesia's Medco Starts Production at Natuna Sea Fields

Chuditch Gas Field Up for Summer Drilling Ops as Sunda Reshapes Ownership Structure

CNOOC Puts Into Production New Oil Field in South China Sea

Petrovietnam, Petronas Extend PSC for Offshore Block

Hanwha Ocean Marks Entry into Deepwater Drilling Market with First Drillship

Borr Drilling Bags Three New Assignments for its Jack-Up Drilling Rigs

Current News

SBM Offshore’s Jaguar FPSO Enters Drydock in Singapore (Video)

EnQuest Picks Up Offshore Oil and Gas Block in Brunei

CNOOC Finds Oil and Gas in South China Sea

Seatrium Makes First Turnkey FPSO Delivery to Petrobras

KBR-SOCAR Joint Venture Secures Work for BP in Azerbaijan

Baker Hughes, Petronas Team Up for Asia-Pacific Energy Resilience

EnQuest Acquires Harbour Energy’s Vietnamese Assets

Woodside Finds South Korean Partners to Advance LNG Value Chain

Valeura Makes Progress with Multi-Well Drilling Campaign in Gulf of Thailand

Santos and QatarEnergy Agree Mid-Term LNG Supply

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com