Shale Boom May Finally Have Succumbed to Oil's Price Slump
(Bloomberg) -- Oil’s bear market may finally be taking its toll on the shale boom.
Hours after Halliburton Co. warned Monday that explorers are “ tapping the brakes" on drilling, Anadarko Petroleum Corp. said it’s trimming spending in the first earnings report this quarter from a major shale producer.
That could make this week a turning point for the troubled global oil market -- the moment when shale companies showed signs of bowing to the low prices they helped inflict. The surge in U.S. production this year has stymied efforts by OPEC and other major oil exporters to unwind a supply glut that’s weighed on the crude market for three years.
“If Wall Street rewards them for being more reserved with their activity levels and capital expenditures, then maybe it catches on," Mike Kelly, a Houston-based analyst for Seaport Global Securities LLC, said in a telephone interview. If Anadarko shares suffer, on the other hand, “I think other people will be reticent about coming out and saying, ‘we’re cutting as well.’"
The initial returns were mixed for Anadarko, one of the biggest oil and natural-gas explorers in the U.S. The Woodlands, Texas-based company slumped in after-hours trading on Monday, when it also announced a loss for the second quarter.
The shares rose 1.7 percent to $44.98 at 9:55 a.m. in New York Tuesday amid a rally in global crude prices. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, rose 2 percent to $47.25 in New York.
Shale explorers started the year in a frenzy of renewed drilling, taking advantage of prices that climbed above $55 a barrel on OPEC’s promises to cut production. Anadarko, for one, said it would boost its capital budget by 70 percent. But crude’s momentum petered out, and prices have been stuck below $50 for two months, with
Now, Anadarko plans to pare $300 million from its 2017 capital budget, lowering it to a range of $4.2 billion to $4.4 billion, according to a company statement Monday.
Financial Discipline
“We sincerely believe that the volatility of the current operating environment requires financial discipline," Chief Executive Officer Al Walker told analysts on the conference call. “As I have said many times, pursuing growth without adequate returns is something we will avoid."
Anadarko’s move followed a similar assessment from Halliburton, the top fracking-services provider. The U.S. oil surge is “showing signs of plateauing and customers are tapping on the brakes," Halliburton Executive Chairman Dave Lesar told analysts on a conference call Monday. Data last week from oilfield services company Baker Hughes showed explorers cutting the number of U.S. rigs for the second time in four weeks.
Oil’s downturn has also made it harder for companies to add new hedging contracts, which lock in payments for future volumes. That’s undercut a strategy that had provided a financial cushion for drillers in the first half of 2017.
Going forward, Anadarko’s hedging positions “are fairly limited," Chief Financial Officer Robert Gwin said on a conference call Tuesday. The price outlook “doesn’t give us a lot of opportunity to lock down any more hedges that we would find materially attractive."
Setting the Tone
Anadarko faced some unique circumstances, said Kelly, the Seaport Global analyst. Production volumes have dropped in Colorado after a fatal house explosion in April that was linked to a natural gas well owned by Anadarko. The company shut down 3,000 wells in the state for further inspections. Spending this year was also inflated somewhat as Anadarko rushed to secure drilling rights in Texas ahead of the expiration of a joint venture with Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Kelly said.
Still, its cutback could “set the tone" for other U.S. explorers and producers, the analyst said. Such a sign of self-discipline could “prove to be a major short-term catalyst for the E&P space given investor sentiment is as bearish as we’ve ever witnessed."
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