by BabyPeanut » Sat 12 Feb 2005, 15:13:03
ibid (NYT above)
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')We're a cyclical business," David J. O'Reilly, chief executive of ChevronTexaco, the second-largest American oil company, said in a telephone interview, "and at the high end of the cycle it makes sense to get the company in good shape and strengthen our balance sheet.
"History tells us that what goes up also goes down."
more chilling
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ne reason exploration spending is declining is quite simple - there is less oil left to drill for in places that are open for exploration, like North America or the North Sea, while the bulk of the world's known reserves, mainly in the Middle East, are mostly shut off to foreign investors.
"If they had attractive things to invest in, they'd be investing their little heads off," said Gerald Kepes, a managing director at PFC Energy, a consultancy based in Washington. "Twenty-five years ago, if prices had risen to $45 a barrel, you would have seen everyone in the United States drop everything, jump in a pickup truck, and drill in their backyards. The fact that you don't see this today says a lot. These kinds of easy opportunities have largely dried up."