The Price Of Oil Exposes The True State Of The Economy

Submitted by Raul Ilargi Meijer via The Automatice Earth blog,


Jack Delano Cafe at truck drivers’ service station on U.S. 1, Washington DC Jun 1940
We should be glad the price of oil has fallen the way it has (losing another 6% today as we write this). Not because it makes the gas in our cars a bit cheaper, that’s nothing compared to the other service the price slump provides. That is, it allows us to see how the economy is really doing, without the multilayered veil of propaganda, spin, fixed data and bailouts and handouts for the banking system.

It shows us the huge extent to which consumer spending is falling, how much poorer people have become as stock markets set records. It also shows us how desperate producing nations have become, who have seen a third of their often principal source of revenue fall away in a few months’ time. Nigeria was first in line to devalue its currency, others will follow suit.

OPEC today decided not to cut production, but whatever decision they would have come to, nothing would have made one iota of difference. The fact that prices only started falling again after the decision was made public shows you how senseless financial markets have become, dumbed down by easy money for which no working neurons are required.

OPEC has become a theater piece, and the real world out there is getting colder. Oil producing nations can’t afford to cut their output in some vague attempt, with very uncertain outcome, to raise prices. The only way to make up for their losses is to increase production when and where they can. And some can’t even do that.

Saudi Arabia increased production in 1986 to bring down prices. All it has to do today to achieve the same thing is to not cut production. But the Saudi’s have lost a lot of clout, along with OPEC, it’s not 1986 anymore. That is due to an extent to American shale oil, but the global financial crisis is a much more important factor.

We are only now truly even just beginning to see how hard that crisis has already hit the Chinese export miracle, and its demand for resources, a major reason behind the oil crash. The US this year imported less oil from OPEC members than it has in 30 years, while Americans drive far less miles per capita and shale has its debt-financed temporary jump. Now, all oil producers, not just shale drillers, turn into Red Queens, trying ever harder just to make up for losses.

The American shale industry, meanwhile, is a driverless truck, with brakes missing and fueled by on cheap speculative capital. The main question underlying US shale is no longer about what’s feasible to drill today, it’s about what can still be financed tomorrow. And the press are really only now waking up to the Ponzi character of the industry.

In a pretty solid piece last week, the Financial Times’ John Dizard concluded with:

Even long-time energy industry people cannot remember an overinvestment cycle lasting as long as the one in unconventional US resources. It is not just the hydrocarbon engineers who have created this bubble; there are the financial engineers who came up with new ways to pay for it.

While Reuters on November 10 (h/t Yves at NC) talked about giant equity fund KKR’s shale troubles:

KKR, which led the acquisition of oil and gas producer Samson for $7.2 billion in 2011 and has already sold almost half its acreage to cope with lower energy prices, plans to sell its North Dakota Bakken oil deposit worth less than $500 million as part of an ongoing downsizing plan.

 

Samson’s bonds are trading around 70 cents on the dollar, indicating that KKR and its partners’ equity in the company would probably be wiped out were the whole company to be sold now. Samson’s financial woes underscore how private equity’s love affair with North America’s shale revolution comes with risks. The stakes are especially high for KKR, which saw a $45 billion bet on natural gas prices go sour when Texas power utility Energy Future Holdings filed for bankruptcy this year.

And today, Tracy Alloway at FT mentions major banks and their energy-related losses:

Banks including Barclays and Wells Fargo are facing potentially heavy losses on an $850 million loan made to two oil and gas companies, in a sign of how the dramatic slide in the price of oil is beginning to reverberate through the wider economy. [..] if Barclays and Wells attempted to syndicate the $850m loan now, it could go for as little as 60 cents on the dollar.

That’s just one loan. At 60 cents on the dollar, a $340 million loss. Who knows how many similar, and bigger, loans are out there? Put together, these stories slowly seeping out of the juncture of energy and finance gives the good and willing listener an inkling of an idea of the losses being incurred throughout the global economy, and by the large financiers. There’s a bloodbath brewing in the shadows. Countries can see their revenues cut by a third and move on, perhaps with new leaders, but many companies can’t lose that much income and keep on going, certainly not when they’re heavily leveraged.

The Saudi’s refuse to cut output and say: let America cut. But American oil producers can’t cut even if they would want to, it would blow their debt laden enterprises out of the water, and out of existence. Besides, that energy independence thing plays a big role of course. But with prices continuing to fall, much of that industry will go belly up because credit gets withdrawn.

The amount of money lost in the ‘overinvestment cycle’ will be stupendous, and you don’t need to ask who’s going to end up paying. Pointing to past oil bubbles risks missing the point that the kind of leverage and cheap credit heaped upon shale oil and gas, as Dizard also says, is unprecedented. As Wolf Richter wrote earlier this year, the industry has bled over $100 billion in losses for three years running.

Not because they weren’t selling, but because the costs were – and are – so formidable. There’s more debt going into the ground then there’s oil coming out. Shale was a losing proposition even at $100. But that remained hidden behind the wagers backed by 0.5% loans that fed the land speculation it was based on from the start. WTI fell below $70 today. You can let your 3-year old do the math from there.

I wonder how many people will scratch their heads as they’re filling up their tanks this week and wonder how much of a mixed blessing that cheap gas is. They should. They should ask themselves how and why and how much the plummeting gas price is a reflection of the real state of the global economy, and what that says about their futures.

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9 Comments
yahsure
yahsure
November 28, 2014 12:35 pm

So the U.S. Needs to cut the use of OPEC and keep the tar sands production going.Otherwise they will have to stop. Go broke. That’s OPEC’s plan? Let’s see if our politicians support our economy and country. .

Bruce
Bruce
November 28, 2014 3:47 pm

yashure,

The shale drilling operations across the USA are leveraged out the ass and most don’t even earn much profit if any even at $130 oil if real accounting is used. So lets support our nation and bail out the oil industry and their banker pals like we did before with mortgage crisis with even more cheap debt to cover all the cheap debt they can’t pay back in the first place. Shit that always works out so well.

Hell yeah lets go a step further and have the politicians subsidize (of course that means the tax payer and the printing press that costs future tax payers) half of all drilling costs so if oil goes back over $100 we might just see one out of 20 of these BS shale wells pay off a little bit.

Actually if governments would leave shit alone and quit helping out industries the markets will reward and rat fuck corporations, nations and people according to what they deserve just fine.

bb
bb
November 28, 2014 4:55 pm

Bruce , what do you know about drilling for oil?What do you know oil production ?*Meeeeeee thinks you be silly Willy.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
November 28, 2014 6:36 pm

Our major export, today, is refined oil..aka Gasoline. But is true frackings EROI falls apart at 70-80 a brl.

So, no the Sauds cannot afford to turn off the taps. In fact they will open them further. Cheap gasoline might decimate fracking jobs but that, as well, leaves more dollars for people to spend on other things like shit from Walmart, Apple, MS, China, Japanese Android sex dolls, and what not.

John
John
November 28, 2014 8:52 pm

Fortunately for the oil drilling folks, EROEI has nothing to do with price, they don’t calculate returns on BTUs but on $$.

So Whiting, collecting a tidy 400,000 barrels of oil from some 5000′ lateral that cost them $8M and they have already paid off with the first 18 months of production during “the good old days”, can sit around and produce the remaining 250,000 barrels as they need to, because certainly at even stripper well rates and $50 oil they can pay operating costs without even breaking a sweat. The key will be the size of the note on the well of course, the term of leverage on the production stream. If, as reasonable companies do, they pay off the CapEx within those 18 months, they are golden for the next 25 years. If not…well…bummer for them. One way or another though, someone will be producing that well, the only question is whether or not it will continue to be Whiting, or some mom and pop in it for the low cost OpEx it involves, them not being burdened by the full cost of CapEx, post Whiting bankrupty.

One mans garbage, another mans banquet.

yahsure
yahsure
November 28, 2014 10:03 pm

Bruce,If you factor in the cost of the military in the middle east? Wer’e paying out the ass.Bailing out?Just buy from our own country and help support our country. From what i have read there is a minimum that needs to be made per barrel. I would rather have it be from here. I don’t have all the answers. But jobs and manufacturing of anything going overseas just cant be good for our country in the long run. I;m sick of the middle east.
So now American companies will go out of business and we are bent over. Gas will go back up.
The Obama plan of overloading the country right out of existence continues. It’s one thing after another to make life harder and more expensive.Divide and conquer. Communist playbook stuff.

Bruce
Bruce
November 28, 2014 10:39 pm

bb says:

Bruce , what do you know about drilling for oil?What do you know oil production ?*Meeeeeee thinks you be silly Willy.

I started in the oil and gas business a few years after high school with an oil lease I made a deal for in eastern Kansas. Real shallow poor boy shit. Very Silly of me. Then I moved up in the oil world in north central and central Oklahoma developing Red Fork channel sands. Developed lots of production out of those channels. Then out in West Texas where “we” ( because the company had about thirty employees by then) found and developed tight sands using gel fracs that were the latest in technology way back then.

I do know what porosity and permeability are and how to calculate how much oil is in place. I know how to read well logs and analyze samples. I also know how to figure how much of that oil should be recoverable. Shale is sorry ass shit that can have a lot of oil in it but zip for permeability. Shale is fucking shale no mater where it is and it sucks. Frac it all you want with everything you got and you still get popcorn farts that die out fast. You ou will never get the vast majority of the oil or gas out of shale. When you frac you are doing it to increase the permeability. Fracing has made shale production more possible but has not made it particularly profitable for anyone much except oil and gas operators who sell the drilling deals for way more than they are worth to bankers, investors and stupid rich ass Chinese who sell there interest to even more stupid people. Then the oilmen charge the piss out them all in operating fees.

I sold my company in the mid 80’s. Since then I’ve hooked up with my old partner and friend who is a geologist and a geophysicist on drilling deals every now and then. He got into the shale drilling up in North Dakota in a big way. I declined to get involved. He made a fortune but also lost a fortune and now he’s broke. I never done anything with shale and I’m not broke. We talk all the time. In fact if oil prices stay low for a while we will go lease hunting and pick up some premo prospects for cheap and maybe a shale play or two to cram up some bankers asshole when the prices rebound as they will someday. Bankers and investors never learn. The oil people have been packing their butts with shale oil dreams since the 50’s. None of this is new. It’s just bigger than ever.

I know how to find and geologically develop prospects, I know how to do the land work. I know how to put together deals and close investors,bankers and mineral owners. I know how to figure costs for building access roads, to well sites, to drilling, to completing and how to operate and manage production. I know how to supervise drilling and completion. I know how to set up a mud program for a well. I know how mean and dirty the oil and gas business is and I also know how fantastic it can be. I Lived it. I loved it. It made me. I still love it.

Shale oil has boosted Americas production dramatically because so many wells have been drilled. That is amazing not for the production but that the financial scam and financial reality has not come home to roost much sooner. You need not worry. Any prolonged slow down in drilling will result in production falling on its ass.

You know what’s silly? People who invest in Shale Oil deals. Now that’s silly.

Bruce
Bruce
November 28, 2014 11:26 pm

yahsure

I hear what you say about the middle east and the costs of the military. We need out of there and we need out of endless war. But there are two things to consider.

We do have some resources and at much higher prices even shale oil production can be modestly profitable. As many shale formations are of widely deposed many wells can be completed. So the financial risks can be minimal if oil prices are quite high and the risk of dry holes is low. However our resource are not endless and will require higher and higher prices to be financially viable. Maybe it would be better to deplete other nations reserves and save our own so we have them when world supply one day becomes more critical.

The military industrial complex is very costly to the tax payers and pumps the debt machine it employs many millions both directly and indirectly. I don’t know how many jobs in the USA are dependent on the military and war but I’ll bet its many many millions. What ever the numbers I’m sure it would be hard on our already weak economy if we eliminated or greatly reduced war and military expenses. Maybe someone here knows to what extent.

Every move these days is a catch 22 and it seems like often the consequences of any decision are bad. Maybe its just the nature of mankind to paint ourselves into a corner. Maybe the Shit just needs to hit the fan and reduce our numbers to the point were none of the stuff that we worry about matters or is even possible.

Golden Oxen
Golden Oxen
November 29, 2014 12:30 am

I know little about oil, but do have a bit of knowledge about leverage.

It is always bad, fragile, and creates instant unsolvable problems when price assumptions are used that prove to be faulty. Bankruptcy is usually the only viable solution.

Nicole Foss, Ilargi. James Howard Kunstler, John Greer and the like will soon be proven correct in their warnings about the fracking bubble in my opinion.

Cheap endless credit packaged and sold by Wall Street, greed, phoney accounting that cannot be understood by anyone, the Red Queen Syndrome, stock promoters, Oh MY!

Expect the worst, you won’t be disappointed.