Just finished a work project and am going to get back into
this a bit. I haven’t really taken any
actions since bailing out of Apache, Chevron, and FCX a while back, and buying
a small amount of EOG. The EOG purchase
has only gone down about 4% or so, quite
remarkably. I’m going to do a post on two historical comparisons that
are interesting to think about and may be instructive to our current situation. But first here’s an interesting chart from a Bloomberg article. Its from Goldman, trying to identify the
areas where drilling will slow and stop. “Break-even” price is something that the sell-side E&P
love to do, but it is sometimes quite hard to get a handle on for a number of
reasons. Here are a few I can think of
off hand.
1) A major part of the break-even price is services
cost, which will decline as the price of oil goes lower, lowering the break
even.
2)
Take away costs may decline as production stops
growing, so the producers get a price closer to benchmark pricing.
3)
Learning is always increasing, and efficiency in
terms of oil production per active rig or dollar spent has been on an uptrend
in the shale plays for years.
4)
There is a wide range of economics within each
play. Companies that have pads set up
and gathering networks in place have a much lower cost. There are also differences in acreage quality
and technical ability that will have an impact.
So if 50% of the rigs leave a play, it doesn’t mean it will produce 50%
less oil over the long term. The inefficient
rigs will leave first.
5)
Exploratory drilling may be the first to shut
down, and the development pad drilling may continue. Thus the rig count may decline with little
actual effect on production.
One broad take-away from this map is that the mid-continent
regions are in bad shape. Of the three
major resource play areas, Bakken, Eagleford, and Permian, it is the Permian
basin that is most at risk. Ironically
this is also the area that has seen a parabolic increase in production
recently. But within the Permian there
are a wide variety of different sub-plays, with varying economics.
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