Trump’s Big Oil deal not to save shale producers

Bloomberg

President Donald Trump said the “Big Oil deal” sealed will save hundreds of thousands of American jobs. But the agreement he brokered depends on a sharp downturn in shale that will likely bring about a wave of bankruptcies and job cuts.
Days of frantic diplomatic maneuvering culminated in an agreement by Opec+ to pare production by 9.7 million barrels a day, ending a devastating price war and belatedly tackling a plunge in demand caused by the coronavirus outbreak.
The lockdowns enacted across much of the world to slow its spread have caused consumption to crater by as much as 35 million barrels a day.
Rather than agree to any formal cuts, Trump is counting on market forces to shave some 2 million barrels a day of overall US output by the end of the year.
US-focussed oil producers have already slashed more than $27 billion from drilling budgets this year and are starting to shut in production. That could spell the end for some shale explorers drowning in debt.
“Trump’s strategy seems to rely on the free market forcing production down and implicit in that is some companies going under,” said Dan Eberhart, a Trump donor and chief executive of drilling services company Canary Drilling Services.
Almost 40% of oil and natural gas producers face insolvency within the year if crude prices remain near $30 a barrel, according to a survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
Oil producer Whiting
Petroleum Corp and service provider Hornbeck Offshore Services filed for bankruptcy last week.
Explorers idled 10% of the US oil-drilling fleet, with more than half of the losses in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, the heart of America’s shale industry, while Concho Resources Inc said that it and other producers are shutting in output.
After the deal, Goldman Sachs Group Inc analysts called the deal “too little, too late”, and said they expect inland US crude prices to decline further in coming weeks as storage fills up. Prices fell below $10 a barrel in some areas of the US during March due to the collapse in demand, with at least one grade bid at negative prices.
Meanwhile, refiners, running out of places to store fuel they can’t sell, are cutting back production and turning
away crude they don’t need, adding to pressure on smaller producers.
Trump’s strategy in pressing the Saudis and Russians to agree to sweeping cuts hinged on his oft-repeated claim that US drillers were already scaling back of their own accord in response to the downturn.
Trump has pointed out that the oil could be pumped later. “Well, there’s no real cost because we’re agreeing to produce a little bit less,” he said at a press conference. “It’s staying in the ground. You have it. You have it for another day.”
Two of the biggest industry trade groups expressed support for the deal.
The American Petroleum Institute welcomed the “announcement of an agreement by other producing nations to follow the lead of the global marketplace — and US producers — to reduce supply to align with lower energy demand as result of the pandemic.”
The American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers was pleased that a deal was reached that “helps US producers and avoids imposing added costs on US refiners.”
With demand destruction outstripping the pledged cuts by a long way, the agreement isn’t so much about balancing markets so much as buying time to prevent stockpiles from overflowing, said Kevin Book, managing director at ClearView Energy Partners LLC in Washington.
“The problem shale has is the same problem every producer has — the low-cost producers will win, relative to the high-cost producers but everyone right now is losing,” Book said. “So what does it mean when everyone’s losing and you’re losing less? Some US producers will weather the storm better than others. I don’t think you can paint shale with a single brush.”

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