More Job Losses Coming To U.S. Shale

The debt ridden shale oil industry is in the midst of a slow motion train wreck. Wait until that Iranian oil enters the world markets. That should do wonders for oil prices.

 

Submitted by Gaurav Agnihotri via OilPrice.com,

With the recently concluded nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1 countries, oil prices have already started heading downward on sentiments that Iran’s crude oil supply would further contribute to the already rising global supply glut. The economic crisis in Greece, OPEC’s high production levels and China’s market turmoil have created more pressure on oil prices, making a price rebound look highly unlikely in the near future.

So, with the prices of both Brent and WTI moving towards $50 per barrel, the short to medium-term outlook for oil remains mostly bearish. This is bad news for the U.S. shale sector which is already dealing with rising debt and the ever-increasing risk of default.

A recent Bloomberg report stated that U.S. driller’s debts stood at $235 billion at the end of first quarter of 2015, which is quite worrying. Does this mean that the U.S. oil sector is likely to witness a lot more layoffs than we have seen so far? Surprisingly, a recent IHS study had revealed that the U.S. shale sector has been boosting job creation in addition to supporting around 1.7 million jobs in U.S.

All this as the overall unemployment rate in U.S. has been declining since previous years. But with rising negative sentiment pertaining to oil prices, is U.S. the shale sector prepared to face one of its biggest tests yet? Will the industry be able to sustain another long period of low oil prices or will it once again resort to trimming its workforce?

Low oil prices will most likely result in more job losses

Since the oil price collapse of last year, we have seen how oil field services and drilling companies have slashed thousands of jobs in order to reduce costs and cut their operational spending. Some of the major oilfield companies like Schlumberger, Halliburton and Weatherford have already announced close to 20,000 layoffs as of February 2015.

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However, the markets turned bullish when oil prices were hovering in the range of $60 per barrel during the last two months, raising hopes that oil companies would be sending close to 150 drilling rigs back into operation.

Now that oil prices are again moving towards the $50 per barrel mark, high drilling costs make almost a third shale oil in the U.S. too expensive to produce. Even Goldman Sachs has admitted that the $50 per barrel oil price level would deter any kind of a drilling recovery in U.S. this year, as there would only be around 20 to 50 rigs returning to work by end of this December. In fact, analysts from Goldman predict WTI will fall to $45 a barrel by October this year.

“Oil rebalancing remains in its early stages with the current cash flow and funding mix stalling it, we believe that as fundamentals reassert themselves and we move past the seasonal peak in demand, oil prices will continue to sequentially decline,” said analysts from Goldman Sachs.

U.S. shale sector faces another challenge as hedges expire

The U.S. shale industry had been somewhat insulated from the effects of low oil prices in the past as companies had hedged their production. This meant that companies had fixed their future selling price in order to temporarily circumvent the ongoing volatility in the oil markets. Since most of the companies had hedged their production before the last oil price crash, they were well protected from the erratic oil price movements. However, the situation is quite different now as most of these hedges are about to expire. For small and medium shale companies that had hedged their production at $85 or $90 per barrel previously, having more of their production exposed to $50 per barrel prices will be painful.

What to expect over the coming months

The coming few months will prove challenging for the sector, and some small and medium U.S. producers may start missing their debt repayments or even file for bankruptcy. Quicksilver Resources and American Eagle Energy are two of the six U.S. based companies that have filed for bankruptcy in 2015 so far. Sabine Oil and Gas Corp. is the latest, and the biggest, U.S. producer to file for bankruptcy so far.

Even mergers and acquisitions have slowed down considerably for the U.S. oil and gas industry in 2015. If the present trend persists, companies will have no choice but to cut their workforces even further to remain competitive and reduce their rising overheads. If oil prices remain in the range of $50 per barrel for longer than expected, even big operators such as Exxon Mobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips (who have so far not made any major layoffs) could start downsizing their workforce.

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5 Comments
Tommy
Tommy
July 17, 2015 10:09 am

I’d say equal to that, or rather compounding with that, will be the effects of the debt ridden oil firms losing the insurance that guaranteed them $90/barrel or such. I’d love to watch that policy get renewed.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 17, 2015 12:52 pm

Canadian company Enbridge is planning on running an oil pipeline from North Dakota to the port @ Duluth, MN – and running it right through some of the most pristine lake country in the US, so I hope the shale oil business tanks and the pipeline project gets shelved.

Montefrío
Montefrío
July 17, 2015 12:59 pm

I have a son in the offshore oil drilling industry, and based on his anecdotal evidence, there have been many layoffs and salary cuts in the majors in oil services. FINANCE capitalism (as opposed to PRODUCTIVE capitalism) is in large measure the apparent reason. Oil is vital to maintain the West in its preeminent position in the global economy, although as Pat Buchanan has correctly stated for many years now, production has ceased to be a priority in the dumbed-down West, a region co-opted by money manipulators, who for all practical purposes produce nothing. Strip out a nation’s productive capacity, reduce it to beggary: simple enough. Take control of the “creation” of money and its distribution, and it matters not at all who “runs” a government, as Amschel Meyer (aka Rothschild) well understood and boldly stated.

Time to cut out the middlemen and get back to the business of producing, before it’s too late, if it’s not already too late.

yahsure
yahsure
July 17, 2015 5:48 pm

I guess the idea of being energy independent isnt going to happen. Produce our own oil and pull out of the middle east? Makes to much sense. If it is possible.So i’m not that happy about OPEC and its trying to put people out of business.I’m sick of the middle east and the wars for energy.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
July 17, 2015 7:40 pm

Yahsure: No it’s not possible, despite all the fracking we’re still importing oil, the idea of being “energy independent” is a pipe dream at best.

I’m chiming in here mostly to ask Admin when do you think all those oilpatch layoffs (20,000+?) are going to show up in the BLS stats, cause we haven’t seen anything yet!