Posted on 02/26/2020 8:07:16 AM PST by EyesOfTX
Im no fan of alarmism, whether it be about energy, the environment or any other subject, but the situation for the domestic oil and gas industry has grown somewhat alarming over the past two months. Since early January the S&P Oil & Gas Index has plunged 32%. Investors appear convinced not just that there is oodles of oil in the world but that the spread of Coronavirus brings the risk of economic flatlining in the biggest growth market for oil China.
With the virus set to spread and the OPEC+ group running out of options to contain the oil glut, the price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crashed through the important $50 level this week, and promises to slide further. Chevron yesterday sent home 300 workers in London over virus fears. Thus, a year that began with a fairly promising outlook is rapidly devolving into one that will present a fight for survival for some domestic producers.
The statement on Tuesday by Dr. Nancy Messonnier, an official at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), that spread of the Coronavirus in the U.S. was inevitable, and that citizens here should begin preparing for an outbreak will certainly work to further inflame the markets. President Donald Trump has reserved television time for a statement designed to calm the situation on Wednesday night, but it could come too late to prevent further disruption in the commodity and financial markets.
Meanwhile, the U.S. market for natural gas remains chronically over-supplied with no real relief in sight. Although the NYMEX price per MMBtu has remained fairly stable during the first two months of the year, it is stable at a price that is far too low for many natural gas producers to remain profitable.
All of these factors now combine to create a precarious situation for heavily-leveraged companies as they head into debt re-determination season. Chesapeake Energy is a good example. When I wrote about that companys long, difficult struggle to survive last November, Morgan Stanley had just lowered its price target for CHK stock from $2.25 per share to $1.25.
On Tuesday, CHK closed at $.4439 per share. That value destruction will create some very difficult conversations in the coming weeks in conversations with holders of the companys debt. Many other mid-size to large independent producers now find themselves in a similar position.
But it isnt only independent producers who are finding the current market conditions to be challenging: Even ExxonMobil, despite its prime position in the Permian Basin and major international discoveries over the past two years, is experiencing a disturbing rate of value destruction. As noted by Bloomberg, XOM stock dropped to a 15-year low on Monday and fell further on Tuesday, just over a week before Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods is scheduled to present the oil explorers long-term strategic plan to investors and analysts. For the year, XOM is now down by almost 25%.
The problem facing the domestic industry and its shale revolution of the last decade has always been its prospect of over-supplying the global market for crude oil and the domestic market for natural gas to the breaking point. The success of the OPEC+ arrangement has provided U.S. producers with a 3-year vacation from having to actually grapple with that issue.
But the elimination of the fear premium in oil prices related to frequent Middle East upheavals in recent years, along with the rude arrival of the Coronaviruss impacts on markets have combined to hasten the end of that vacation, and many companies are completely unprepared to deal with the fallout.
Big, stable companies like ExxonMobil, who have major, diverse assets across the globe and full integration in their operations will be able to continue to survive and thrive despite the hits their market caps have taken in recent months. But companies that have bet everything on shale and become over-leveraged in the process are going to have a very difficult time in meeting their obligations.
As reported by the Financial Times on Monday, Bank of America noted that US energy stocks are now underperforming those in the S&P 500 by the biggest margin since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.
That is a troubling marker indeed, one that likely presages a year that will see another big shaking-out in the domestic U.S. oil and gas industry.
Some think free energy will be released soon. What effect will that have.
Now is the time to buy and wait a year or two..
Many are down 80 percent
So whats the big problem DB is forecasting? Recession or depression from low energy prices? I doubt that.
The petroleum industry periodically goes through cycles like this. Companies go bankrupt, debts arent paid, workers are laid off...but, in the end, things shake out and supply and demand balance is restored. It is never pretty while its happening and hurts lots of people (including bond holders and shareholders), but thats capitalism.
We could always elect Bernie, nationalize the petroleum industry, live happily ever after and enjoy reading the governments newest Five Year Plan for Oil and Glorious Revolution.
After seeing the pollution in India with PDJT's visit, I can see where natural gas powered tuk-tuks etc would help to clear the air. We'd be more than happy to export some to them....
Not enough oil and gas and there is a crisis. Too much oil and gas and there is a crisis. Call it events, call it volatility, call it markets. It’s nothing new.
Oil and gas production from shale is relatively expensive, which makes it uneconomical unless prices are high. Granted, shale production gets scaled back when prices are too low, but too much so and the resulting wave of bankruptcies and abandoned shale projects reduces the pool of resources available for rapid mobilization when prices again spike.
Low priced energy allows for a million innovations.
As long as gas is above 50 cents a gallon at the pump, and natural gas above 7 bucks per thousand cubic feet, let it fall, fall, fall.
5 buck a barrel oil sounds really good to this California boy.
Quick! Deep state!
This is your chance to take out Trump!
Coronavirus will cause a glut. As planes trains and automobiles use less fuel. The will only go for a while until we get back to normal. I figure we have a glut through the driving season and into next year. If you are looking for stocks to buy consider KMG or EPD (pipelines). Or PSX and MPC (refineries). Their input is getting cheaper so they will sell more as we come out of the flu season. Companies like Chevron and Exxon drill and sell oil. They will lose the most as oil prices go down. Don’t buy them now or any time.
CHK was mishandled...by management. And has been for many years...even in the booming years. But in the bust years...it got exposed. Last time I traded it I lost $$$...It will be a OTC stock soon....
I would buy CHK
Yep!!
Check that....I wouldn’t buy CHK!!!!
AS our fuel prices have made a u-turn and are trending higher... up 10% in the last week... hmmm...
They plowed right through OPEC attempts to destroy them by driving down the price. I dont think coronavirus or electric vehicles will do it either, were a long way from widespread adoption.
I thought it would be a good idea in early 2015 but was too far out in front and prices never recovered to levels needed for a significant boost that never came. Meanwhile, the dividends were good based on the low acquisition prices.
DB - what happened to “That is all”?
Oil has always been a cyclical commodity. Boom bust, boom bust.
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