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Morgan Stanley Warns That Rising Rig Count Could
Undo the Oil Rally
By Irina Slav
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 20, 2016
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In an industry where anything could happen, surprises—often
unwelcomed—are hard to come by. Oil is exactly such an industry at the
moment. No one is sure where oil is heading, near-tem forecasts range from
$20 to
$80 per barrel by the end of the year, and there are just too many
wild cards on the scene.
So, in a sense, the
news that shale producers are launching more drilling rigs is not
really news at all. It was expected, the companies themselves said they
are ready to start ramping-up production as soon as prices reach some more
reasonable level. What’s new, perhaps, is Morgan Stanley’s warning that
production from the new wells being drilled could prompt a reversal of
forecasts that U.S. crude production is falling and will continue to fall.
Morgan Stanley commodity strategist Adam Longson, who led the team
that researched the situation, said that this reversal carries a downside
risk for oil prices. According to Longson’s team, “The rig count in the
highest initial production counties of the Permian Midland continues to
march higher and is not far from its 2015 peak.” That’s impressive on its
own, but the other thing that’s new is where all these new rigs are
concentrated: in high-yield fields. This means that the ramp-up could be
pretty significant.
As Forbes author Art Berman wittily
notes, rigs don’t produce oil, wells produce oil. What’s more, even a
decline in the rig count does not necessarily signal a respective decline
in output. On the contrary, as a Baker Hughes figure shows, while rigs
have been in steady and sharp decline since 2014, the number of wells
continued to climb throughout the period to February 2016.
Things
may have stalled for a bit after prices tanked below $30, but now that
they have recovered, shale boomers are eager to start pumping more. And
prices, of course, reacted to drop well below that dream price level of
$50. It wasn’t just the rig count that drove them down; to be fair, Brexit
had a central role, but that doesn’t negate the effect of the higher rig
count.
Oil producers in the shale patch are aware that they are
walking a very fine line. Yet, they don’t really have a lot of options.
Talk about rising drilling efficiency and official
data that supports it
doesn’t pay down debt, and this is what shale boomers have in
abundance.
What they don’t have is space for maneuvering as
lenders
tighten credit. Basically, they can’t continue to curb production, but
they must be very careful by how much they increase it. It’s a precarious
situation. All that shale boomers can do is continue to work on efficiency
and hope that the Brexit fallout subsides quickly.
Link to
original article:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Morgan-Stanley-Warns-That-Rising-Rig-Count-Could-Undo-The-Rally.html
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