Whether it is to cripple the will of Putin and end his support of the Syria regime (thus handing the much desired gas-pipeline traversing territory over to Qatari and/or Saudi interests), a hypothesis first presented here in September and subsequently validated by the NYT, or much more simply, just to destroy any and all marginal producers so that Saudi Arabia is once again the world’s most important and price-setting producer and exporter of oil, one thing is clear: the Saudis will not relent from pumping more oil into the market than there is (declining) demand for, until its biggest threat and competitor – the US shale patch – which recently had become the marginal oil producer, as well as its investors – mostly junk bond holders gambling with other people’s money – are crushed, driven before the Saudi royal family, and the lamentation of their women is heard across the globe.
That much is known.
But what neither the Saudis, nor the US shale companies, and certainly not their investors who lately seem to get their investment advice from the no longer Nielsen-rated Financial Comedy Channel, know is even if every last US shale company is Friendo‘ed, there is an even more insidious group of drillers and oil extractors behind them, backed by an even greater monetary bubble and an even more clueless group of sources of cash, just waiting to step in and become the next marginal oil producer.
China.
According to Global Times, the slump in oil prices “has triggered a flurry of Chinese investment in oil wells, in a bid to get a high return from the black gold.”
Cutting to the chase: once the US funding for local shale runs out, as companies – some already levered 5x, 6x, or more can no longer even remotely service their debt and not even Fed’s ZIRP is enough of an impetus for yield chasers to throw more good (other people’s) money after bad – start filing for bankruptcy en masse, who will step in continue the extraction? Why China of course: Global House Buyer, a Beijing-based services provider to Chinese overseas investors, said on Saturday that the company now has presented an investment opportunity in oil wells in Texas, US, to Chinese investors.
According to the company, the project, involving six oil wells in an area of 2,240 acres, is located in Crockett County in Texas. Cooperating with local developers, the project is expected to attract a total of $4 million investment at the first stage, with the minimum investment of $100,000 each.
The annual return could reach more than 12 percent, the company said.
Or, if Chinese sources of funding rush in to maintain oil supply at its current levels, or even boost it, into a world where demand is plunging (and, poetically, driven by a plunge in demand out of China itself), that annual return could reach 0, -12% or, most likely -100% as yet another series of investors with hot central bank money is wiped out.
Of course, nobody ever anticipates lower prices: “The return is based on our prediction of future oil prices,” Liu Bin, general manager responsible for the US investment at Global House Buyer, told the Global Times on Saturday. Liu predicts that the current oil price still has room to rise, which will generate higher profits for the project.
What Liu seems to be unaware is that the current low price of oil which enables him to find investment opportunities in the Texas shale is precisely due to supply and demand being where they are, and unless supply collapses to keep up with dropping demand, oil prices will never go up.
But why bother with the details. For now Liu, and many of his competitors, is merely eager to demonstrate his ability to generate 12% returns on the back of a surging price driven by… his incremental pumping?
According to Liu, the oil wells have been in operation since 2012. Currently, the total output per day is about 170,000 barrels, and they still have more than 10 years of drilling capacity with a stable output.
“Investing in the oil wells could be read as another sort of real estate investment,” Shi Ruixue, CEO of Global House Buyer, said.
Because the Chinese clearly have a tremendous sense for undervalued real estate investments. “Investing in oil well is a market-oriented activity, and it is understandable why investors are flocking to the oil sector, as the oil prices are still at a low level, Han Xiaoping, chief information officer at energy portal china5e.com, told the Global Times on Sunday.”
And now comes the Friday humor:
“Chinese investors have gained more experience about risks after the financial crisis in 2009. It is a good timing to invest in oil projects as the prices are still low. But if the prices move further down, it will pose risks to oil investment,” Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times on Sunday.
He Shaohua, a potential investor who has invested in housing projects in the US, told the Global Times that he planned to invest $100,000 in the oil wells, as it is good to diversify his investment.
In other words, just as US junk bond investors in energy companies swear to never repeat their mistake again, at least those who still have “other people’s money” to invest, here comes the next patsy, one who has just as deep pockets if not deeper, and who will assure that the US pumping action does not stop for a very, very long time.
We hope we don’t need to explain happens to the price of oil as China storms in to restart the deserted US shale rigs.
However, one thing we can’t wait to find out, is just how will China react when it learns that just as it was preparing to celebrate, that it will need to deal with yet another marginal source of production (and funding), one who will surely engage in output competition for the next 12-24 months, until the latest batch of hot money, just off the central bank printer, runs out.


rockman on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 10:16 am
More fantasy conspiracy theory used to garner attention for themselves IMHO. First and foremost, if oil goes back to its former high prices levels the US shales will again be vigorously drilled again IMHO. I’ve been going this for 4 decades and the dynamics have never varied: the price of oil or NG spikes up and companies (especially pubcos) start throwing money around like there’s no tomorrow. This same BS was tossed out 30 years ago when the Saudis opened the valves and oil prices dropped below $15/bbl. They did it then for the same reason they aren’t cutting production today: absolute desperation for cash flow. Keeping the natives on the govt tit is what keeps the royal family in power. And just as lower prices in the 80’s didn’t drive the US oil patch into extinction neither will this slump.
Easy proof: the same US oil patch that sunk tens of $billions into the shales beginning just 10 years after dealing with $17/bb oil will start throwing $billions more after dealing with $50/bbl oil when prices recover to former levels. That might take 3 years or 10 years. But it doesn’t matter: the human greed factor is a universal constant IMHO.
The only thing the current low oil price will do is generate lower revenue for EVERY OIL PRODUCER…including the KSA. The only difference between those producers: the KSA will lose more income then any other oil producer. They’ll even lose more then all US oil producers combined. So the KSA and the US oil patch (which dealt with less then half the current price not long ago) will survive. The only difference: the KSA will lose more in the interim.
So who really is the big loser?
shortonoil on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 11:55 am
“are crushed, driven before the Saudi royal family, and the lamentation of their women is heard across the globe.
That much is known.”
OH boy!!!! Some more theatrics. Shale was a dead horse coming out of the gate, and the Saudis are to be blamed. All this propaganda about the Saudis this, and the Saudis that is getting a little uncomfortable.
“According to Global Times, the slump in oil prices “has triggered a flurry of Chinese investment in oil wells, in a bid to get a high return from the black gold.”
Of course it is all a ploy by the military industrial complex, and the bankers to finally bankrupt China once, and for all! Getting them into shale would certainly do it, and of course they are too stupid to see what is happening in the US.
This crap seems to be coming from every direction. It makes one feel like we are getting set up for something????
Dredd on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 12:52 pm
“More fantasy conspiracy theory”
Cheap shot.
What makes a conspiracy theory wrong or right is not CIA propaganda nor any form of denial.
Conspiracy theory is one of the fundamental theories of legal prosecutions in the United States:
“In fact, you might be surprised how many conspiracy theories are handled by the federal and state governments on a daily basis:
Over one-quarter of all federal criminal prosecutions and a large number of state cases involve prosecutions for conspiracy.
(Conspiracy Theory, 112 Yale L.J. 1307 (2003), Preface, emphasis added). That is a lot of real, serious as a heart attack, beyond a reasonable doubt, and well documented occurrences of “conspiracy theories” going on in reality before the eyes of anyone who wants to see them.”
(On The Origin of “Conspiracy Theory”, 2, 3, 4).
Stop being afraid.
dissident on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 2:55 pm
What evidence is there that Saudi Arabia is “flooding” the market with oil? Zero. So, until this evidence is produced all such articles are so much drivel.
GregT on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 3:56 pm
Why would the Saudi’s not cut production by 20% to keep prices at twice their current rates?
coffeeguyzz on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 4:35 pm
Six wells … 170,000 barrels of oil per day … 2,240 sq. acres (less than 2 Drilling Spacing Units up in the Bakken) …
When you have an article claiming six wells produce nearly half the daily output of the Niobrara … well, sure, that all makes a lot of sense.
Makati1 on Sat, 7th Feb 2015 7:55 pm
Boy is it easy to see the hidden motives behind the above comments and the hidden fears. A psychiatrist would have a field day with this group.
I doubt that there is really ANY conspiracy or group plans at work. Just real life situations caused by the Debt Economy we are sinking into. Some want to believe that it will take down Russia or that China is blind to the reality of their economy or the greedy ‘investors’ in fraking will return after. I don’t see signs of those, anywhere.
I think that many will be disappointed when the dust settles. I suspect that they will also be living on a level much lower than today. So, pop some corn, pour a beer and sit back and watch the true “Reality Show”. It promises to be exciting.
Ted Wilson on Sun, 8th Feb 2015 8:43 pm
Not only the shale companies are cutting production, even the middle east producers are cutting dow production.
Chevron is reducing output in a middle eastern field.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-02-08/kuwait-saudi-wafra-oil-field-run-by-chevron-said-to-cut-output?cmpid=yhoo