Based on the discussions I'm hearing, surface may start to feel the pinch if we see less than $70, but the main players will just shift money to Subsea projects. Subsea players could actually benefit from this.
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yeah, you aren't using jack-ups for deepwater
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Same thing is happening in DW. Look at Diamond offshore recent quarterly report. They are not laying off yet, but rig rates and contracts are down.
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77.68 low so far
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Where there is smoke there is often fire, but we're just not seeing a big slowdown for deep water projects. This was a record year by a large amount and more projects came in this month.
What we've been projecting is a lull for companies to regroup after all the projects that have materialized over the last three years before another large wave of projects hits next year. Lower oil prices might just be a good excuse to review personnel after all the hiring and look to become more efficient before going again. Lower oil prices shouldn't directly impact deep water in a negative way. If anything companies may shift allocation to deep water with shallow water and shale becoming less economical.
Have u seen the stock prices of the deep water drillers? They have been getting crushed as rates and utilization continue to decline. Tells you all you need to know about the current state of the deep water market.
quote:If it effects the future supply of oil, certainly of course. Libya is just finally now coming back on-line fairly strongly so any destabilizing there would probably have a modest upward force on pricing.
Could war or a bad Gulf storm still affect prices like they used to?
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Could this cause the real estate bubble in Houston to pop if prices dip under $70ish on the WTI?
quote:One could argue Ike (2008), but for the most part, no.
Have we had a hurricane since the fracing boom? I don't recall one. I wonder if it would spike as high with all the new supplies in the pipeline.