Rig-Count Chaos: Shale Drillers Are Confusing Oil Analysts

Rig-Count Chaos: Shale Drillers Are Confusing Oil Analysts
For US shale drillers who have seen prices climb almost 50% in six months, it's been largely a rig-less recovery.

(Bloomberg) -- For U.S. shale drillers who have seen prices climb almost 50 percent in six months, it’s been largely a rig-less recovery, a conundrum for traders seeking to forecast the future.

Normally, you’d expect the rigs to return to the field in significant numbers as producers flush with added cash looked to boost output. But the weekly Baker Hughes tally has stayed remarkably still.

The reason: explorers are doing more with less, forcing traders to use a bigger toolbox of stats, metrics and gauges to track U.S.  production that’s expected to top 10 million barrels a day as the year progresses. That includes everything from producer spending surveys to oilfield hiring reports, and even demand for the tiny grains of sand that prop open oil-bearing cracks.

"A well that comes online in U.S. onshore today is dramatically different than one that came on five or 10 years ago," Leo Mariani, an analyst who covers explorers and producers at NatAlliance Securities, said in a phone interview. "It’s just a different animal."

For the market, that means the country that’s become the world’s swing producer and a thorn in OPEC’s side is becoming a whole lot harder to read.

The number of rigs drilling for oil in the U.S. -- from the Gulf of Mexico to the Permian Basin in Texas to the Bakken shale in North Dakota -- is less than half the count in the middle of 2014, when the crude market crash began. And yet, America is set to rival Saudi Arabia and Russia, with production expected to top 10 million barrels as early as next month and to reach 11 million toward the end of next year.

How? The combination of faster and faster horizontal drilling and more intense fracking has allowed production to explode even as the number of rigs drop. Up until about four years ago, it was safe enough to use the rig count to track activity because the industry was more reliant on single vertical wells.

"You’ve got different levers to pull to get increasingly efficient," James Wicklund, an analyst at Credit Suisse in Dallas, said in a phone interview. "There is not one clear acknowledged reporting source for the metrics that we use. It makes it a little bit murkier."

Brad Handler and other analysts at Jefferies cobbled together a chart of nine other metrics besides the rig count in a note to investors this month. For example, the number of frack stages in a well are expected to increase 14 percent this year to an average of 28.5, more than double what explorers were able to do in 2014. And the total amount of sand crammed into wells this year is expected to grow 20 percent to more than 100 million tons.

Chesapeake Energy Corp. heralded in the arrival of the monster frack a little more than a year ago, declaring what it called "propageddon" on one gas well in Louisiana with more than 25,000 tons of sand pumped into it.

After switching from the old standby rig count to closely watching the well count a few years back, the latest shift about a year and a half ago is to track how long the wells are drilled sideways under ground and how many frack stages are in each of those wells, Wicklund said.

At 7,500 feet, the average lateral length of a well is 50 percent longer compared to three years ago. And a rig can drill 25 wells a year, compared to 15 just two years ago, he said. But those are stats mainly gathered from third-party data providers such as Drillinginfo Inc. and IHS Markit Inc.

On the free side, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reports monthly the backlog of wells that have been drilled but not completed. As of November, the latest month available, that’s 7,354 drilled but uncompleted wells, or DUCs.

And the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that service providers are back to hiring again, with jobs up 21 percent since oilfield employment hit rock bottom in October 2016. But Mariani said it’s also important to know the specific workforce constraints to get a better picture.

"You started to re-hire aggressively, but we’ve seen multiple reports of just not having enough truck drivers, guys not able to get enough frack crews and the quality of those frack crews that are coming in there," Mariani said. "That stuff makes it difficult, adds another wrinkle to any kind of prediction people want to make for the next couple of years in terms of rate of oil growth."

To contact the reporter on this story: David Wethe in Houston at dwethe@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net Carlos Caminada, Joe Carroll.



WHAT DO YOU THINK?


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Rudolf Huber  |  January 12, 2018
Are we still living in antiquity? Drilling has gone real sophisticated. The drillers are not the oil smeared musclemen anymore. Its become a pretty nerdy business. Future drillers will have more in common with Silicon Valley whizkids than with Texan roughnecks.
paul mosvold  |  January 12, 2018
Analysts has created this dilemma by using the label "Shale Drillers" which are Producers or Exploration companies. No "Shale Drillers" owns a single rig, they hire a rig from a Drilling Contractor. The major hiring does not come from Oil Companies or Producers, the vast majority of employees work for sub-contractors.
John Smith  |  January 12, 2018
Those who monitor the industry from New York and Washington have been naively depending on rig count to guide their prognostications for far longer than it was relevant.


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