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Page added on March 23, 2015

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First Oil, Now Shale Gas Set To Crash Amid “Orgy Of Over-Production”

Production

Spending cuts for oil-directed drilling have dominated first quarter 2015 energy news but rig counts for shale gas drilling are too high.

Investors should pay attention to this growing problem. Bank of America fears sub-$2 gas prices now that winter heating worries are over. Low natural gas prices affect the economics for gas-rich oil production in the Eagle Ford Shale and Permian basin plays as well as for the shale gas plays.

Meanwhile, an orgy of over-production is taking place in the Marcellus Shale. Well head prices are now below $1.50 per thousand cubic feet of gas because of limited take-away capacity and near-saturation of regional demand. Even companies in the Wyoming, Susquehanna, Allegheny and Washington County core areas of the Marcellus play are losing money at these prices.

The rig count for shale gas plays has decreased by only half as much as for the tight oil plays. The reason appears to be that most shale gas companies do not have significant positions in the tight oil plays and must continue to drill to maintain production levels.

Shale gas rig counts have dropped only 19% for horizontal rigs and 25% for all rigs from 2014 highs. The corresponding decrease for tight oil plays is 41% and 46%, respectively, as shown in the table below.

RigCountGasvOil

Rig count change table for tight oil vs. shale gas plays as of March 20, 2015. Source: Baker Hughes and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.  (Click Image To Enlarge)

This has puzzled me because the shale gas plays are not commercial at less than about $6/mmBtu except in small parts of the Marcellus core areas where $4 prices break even. Natural gas prices have averaged less than $3/mmBtu for the first quarter of 2015 and are currently at their lowest levels in more than 2 years.

HenryHubQuarterlyAvPrices

Henry Hub daily and quarterly average natural gas prices. Source: EIA and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.(Click Image To Enlarge)

Most shale gas producers either do not have positions in the tight oil plays or are strongly gas-weighted in their production mix. These companies must continue to drill in shale gas plays despite poor economics in order to avoid the consequences of falling production levels.

The only criterion that seems to matter to investors these days is production guidance. If production drops, stock value will fall even farther than it has already. This will trigger loan covenants if asset values fall below thresholds set out in the loan agreements. When that happens, the loans will be called unless the companies can come up with more cash. This might result in bankruptcy. So, the drilling must continue as long as there is capital.

The table below shows the companies that have overlapping positions in both tight oil and shale gas plays based on current drilling activity.

CurrentRigCountsGasAndOil

Current rig counts for companies with positions in both tight oil and shale gas plays. Source: DrillingInfo and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. Rig counts may differ from Baker Hughes because the source is different.  (Click Image To Enlarge)

All companies in the table except Continental Resources are gas-weighted so maintaining gas production levels is important to them for the same reasons it is important to operators without tight oil exposure. Overall, the companies in the table operate only about one-third of all rigs in the shale gas plays. Shale gas is otherwise characterized by a different set of companies that feel they have no choice but to continue drilling and hope that investors don’t notice or care.

ShaleGasRigCountByOperator

Shale gas rig count by operator. Source: DrillingInfo and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. Rig counts may vary from Baker Hughes because the source is different.  (Click Image To Enlarge)

But don’t oil-weighted companies face the same concerns about production levels?
I compared the change in rig count from January to March 2015 by operators in the Eagle Ford Shale play to understand how rig counts are being reduced. I found that key operators were strategically reducing their activity to the best locations in core areas in order to affect production levels the least (see chart below).

EagleFordRigCount

Eagle Ford Shale rig count comparison by operator, January and March 2015. Source: DrillingInfo and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.(Click Image To Enlarge)

The next most active class of operators are holding drilling fairly constant in this most productive of tight oil plays. Then, there are a small number of new entrants to the play that are more than balanced by operators exiting the play. My previous post on Eagle Ford well performance showed that there are ample locations in the most commercial parts of the core areas for well-positioned operators to optimize production with fewer new wells.

It is worth noting that the top group of operators in the Eagle Ford Shale play have reasonably good balance sheets (see the table in my previous post) and are not particularly vulnerable to loan covenant threshold triggers. This cannot be said for many of the top operators in the shale gas plays shown in the table below.

2014EOYDataForGasE&Ps

Summary table of 2014 year-end financial data for natural gas-weighted U.S. land-based E&P companies. All dollar amounts in millions of U.S. dollars. FCF=free cash flow; CF/CE=cash flow from operations/capital expenditures. Source: Google Finance and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. (Click Image To Enlarge)

The table shows financial data through year-end 2014. What it reveals is not pretty. 2014 negative cash flow reached $15.5 billion, an increase of $7.2 billion over 2013. Much of this increase involved Southwestern Energy’s puzzling acquisition of Chesapeake’s West Virginia Marcellus Shale position that increased that company’s negative cash flow by almost $5 billion over 2013.

On average, shale-gas companies earned only 68 cents for every dollar that they spent in 2014. Total debt increased almost $10 billion to $93.5 billion and average debt exceeded stated equity by 18% excluding companies with negative equity including the now-bankrupt Quicksilver Resources.

Shale gas plays are commercial failures. The misuse of capital to continue to increase production while destroying price and shareholder equity has gone on for too long. Investors should demand that shale gas companies cut rig counts at least as much as tight oil companies have.

Rig Count Summary for the Week Ending March 20, 2015

Rig counts are important today because they may indicate future trends for oil prices. Horizontal wells in the Bakken, Eagle Ford and Permian basin plays produced about 3.5 million barrels of crude oil per day in November 2014 (see table below). These are, therefore, the key plays to watch for rig count decreases.

USTightOilProduction

U.S. key tight oil play production. Source: Drilling Info and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. (Click Image To Enlarge)

The horizontal rig count for these key plays–Bakken-Eagle Ford-Permian HRZ-dropped 25 rigs this week (23 rigs last week) and was down 40% from the 2014 maximum. The horizontal rig count for tight oil plays overall dropped 22 rigs this week (32 last week) and is 41% lower than the 2014 maximum (see the first table above in this post). Rigs for all tight oil plays were down 31 this week (39 last week) and are 46% lower than 2014 maximum rig counts.

MostChangedRigCountsByPlay

Summary of most changed rig counts by play. Source: Baker Hughes and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.(Click Image To Enlarge)

The plays with the greatest change from their respective 2014 maximum rig counts may be viewed as the least commercially attractive to producers. This suggests that the Barnett, Granite Wash, and Permian All are the least attractive.

It is interesting that the Bakken moved into this category this week. Well head prices in the Bakken have now fallen below $30 per barrel. The play is geologically solid but wells are expensive, the pay-out times are fairly long because relatively low decline rates for a shale play, and rail transport adds a lot to the cost of each barrel of oil.

The overall U.S. rig count for the week ending March 20, 2015 was 1,069 of which 1,030 were land rigs. Only about 25% of total land rigs and 11% of horizontal rigs are drilling outside of the major shale gas and tight oil plays. Detailed data for all of the plays are shown in the table below.

AllU.S.LandRigCounts

Summary table for all U.S. land rig counts. Source: Baker Hughes and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. (Click Image To Enlarge)

This and other data continues to suggest decreasing U.S. tight oil production and increasing world demand. Rig count continues to fall for the critical oil-producing plays and that means that things are on track for an oil-price recovery sooner than later.

Investors should carefully examine why shale gas players have not reduced rig counts more. Continued drilling in the Marcellus will crush natural gas prices further. The fact that there are 34 rigs running in the Haynesville Shale is economically baffling. We may only speculate on why there are 51 rigs in the Woodford Shale and why some operators now call it the SCOOP play.

OilPrice.com



9 Comments on "First Oil, Now Shale Gas Set To Crash Amid “Orgy Of Over-Production”"

  1. Plantagenet on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 6:26 pm 

    First the oil glut—then a natural gas glut.

    Who ever dreamed back in 2005 when conventional oil production was peaking that fracking shales would wind up creating these gluts in oil and NG just 10 years down the road?

  2. dave thompson on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 6:52 pm 

    Yes I agree planta, the oil over supply was not predicted, however the age of limits and world economic collapse as we are experiencing now is no surprise.

  3. Makati1 on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 7:35 pm 

    Dave, the same thing happens with houses. It takes years for a developer to go from a field to a finished neighborhood with millions invested in land, permits, engineering, streets, utilities, design, labor, etc. before the first house is even started. Problem is, there is little coordination, or none, between developing companies and they may all start multi-hundred home developments in the same general area, at the same time. If the economy changes and/or the demand is not there for all of the developments homes, they are stuck with selling cheap or losing everything, so they sell cheap. I’ve seen this happen several times in my construction career. Ditto for oil and natural gas, it seems.

  4. Harquebus on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 7:44 pm 

    Without QE there would be no fracking industry. It was debt that enable shale oil production. Now that debt has to be repaid. Good luck with that.
    The global economy can not grow with high oil prices and the oil industry can not grow without them.

  5. Richard Ralph Roehl on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:28 pm 

    50-100 Earth years from now… over production and over population will have made most of the planet inhospitable for sustaining most complex life forms.

    Human baboonies are colorful, creative and imaginative… butt as a whole (and ass-a-hole) they are infected with hubris… and they lack prescience and common sense.

    The host organism inevitably makes extinct life forms unable to adjust to change.

  6. Makati1 on Mon, 23rd Mar 2015 8:40 pm 

    RRR, thanks for the chuckle with your creative word use. We all need a humorous moment or two in our day.

    I think your timeline is about right for the death of our world. That my grand kids may live to experience it is all the more reason I want the capitalist system to crash and burn ASAP. Maybe there will be enough left for them to live a decent life. They may never have grand kids to worry about but that may be a good thing. Humans are so very overrated … by humans. Mother Natures will just start with whatever we leave behind and create a new ecosystem with out us.

  7. rockman on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 3:45 am 

    “Who ever dreamed back in 2005 when conventional oil production was peaking that fracking shales would wind up creating these gluts in oil and NG just 10 years down the road?” Who dreamed in 1982 that just 10 years later the glut of conventional NG production would drive the price down 70%? Who dreamed in 1980 that just 6 years later the glut of conventional oil would drive the price down 70%?

    Actually based upon the dynamics of oil/NG production and pricing over the last 40 years the 50% reduction in oil prices the last year and the 30% INCREASE in NG prices the last 3 years as the Marcellus play was booming such “dreams” should have not been that difficult to conjure up. LOL.

  8. paulo1 on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 8:42 am 

    Mak,

    Great analogy using construction booms and collapse. Here, it is logging…cut cut cut even while markets are slowing down, then lay everyone off and watch the restructuring. We used to have a Govt. imposed quota system for harvesting but right wing Govt removed it at the urging of companies and shareholders. We lost all stability in the quest for short term profits.

  9. BobInget on Tue, 24th Mar 2015 1:54 pm 

    India To Grow At 7.8 Per Cent In 2015-16; Surpass China: ADB
    Press Trust Of India
    Posted: 24/03/2015 09:28 IST Updated: 24/03/2015 09:28 IST INDIA GROWTH

    The Asian Development Bank (ADB) today projected India’s growth rate to surpass China and improve to 7.8 per cent in next fiscal and further to 8.2 per cent in 2016-17.

    India’s growth and investor confidence will improve on the back of government’s structural reform agenda and improved external demand, the Asian Development Outlook (ADO), an annual publication of the ADB, said.

    It forecast that India’s growth will improve from 7.4 per cent in current fiscal to 7.8 per cent in 2015-16 and further to 8.2 per cent in 2016-17.

    As regards China, the ADB projected the economic growth to decelerate from 7.4 per cent in current fiscal to 7.2 per cent next fiscal and 7 per cent in 2016-17.

    “India is expected to grow faster than the People?s Republic of China in the next few years. The government?s pro-investment attitude, improvements in the fiscal and current account deficits, and some forward movement on resolving structural bottlenecks have helped improve the business climate and make India attractive again to both domestic and foreign investors,” ADB Chief Economist Shang-Jin Wei said.

    He, however, cautioned that although the economic prospects look promising, “there are still many ?challenges”.

    ADB’s estimates is, however, lower than the 8-8.5 per cent growth estimates of Indian government for the 2015-16 fiscal beginning April. It is better than 7.5 per cent projection by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).?

    The ADB said that strong growth outlook is contingent on further acceleration in investment activity. “The prospects look promising”.

    It said the measures undertaken by the government including accelerating environment clearances for infrastructure projects, easing the process of land acquisition for infrastructure and industrial corridors, allowing auction of coal mines to the private sector, and easing the compliance burden of labour laws on small? and medium-sized industries would help boost growth.

    The ADB said that India’s most pressing policy challenges is to promote cities as engines of economic growth and jobs.

    “To fully reap the benefits of urbanisation, the government must make further efforts to coordinate urban? and industry planning to attract industries into cities, and provide the necessary supporting infrastructure,” it?said.

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