^^^ that hurt my heart
quote:
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said Monday it saw a "U-shaped" recovery with depressed prices until the market rebalances and prices rise in 2016. The firm said it expected U.S. crude to average $47.15 a barrel this year, down from a previous prediction of $73.75.
quote:
ConocoPhillips, a major U.S. oil producer, says it can make a profit on its U.S. shale wells as long as oil trades for more than $40 a barrel, a figure that has been falling in recent years. A Conoco spokesman said improved efficiency, better technology and a better understanding of the rocks helped the company reduce costs.And it is not alone. The expense of getting oil from the Eagle Ford Shale fell by about 15%, or $7.50 a barrel, last year, despite intense competition for rigs, truck drivers and oil-field services, says Pers Magnus Nysveen, head of analytics for Rystad Energy, a Norway-based global oil consultant. Costs could fall another 10% to 15% this year as some financially weak companies pull back and competition for services lessens."The key driver here is improved efficiency," Mr. Nysveen says.Companies like EOG Resources Inc. are drilling better wells faster. EOG said recently it takes 4.3 days to drill its average well in the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, down from 14.2 days in 2012. What's more, as it drills more of them, it has figured out how to locate wells to get the highest oil output.Combining lowering costs and increasing output means that EOG says it can drill wells at $40 per barrel in North Dakota, South Texas and West Texas, while still earning a 10% return. We "pride ourselves on being a very efficient operator," Billy Helms, EOG's head of exploration, said at a recent industry conference.
quote:Thanks for the link. It depends on what it costs you to get it into storage, store it and get it back out of storage and the cost of capital. You can buy oil today for $46 and store it until June of next year (2016) and possibly sell it for $57, according to your link.
If I owned storage, wouldn't I be maxing it out due to the contango trade?
http://www.cmegroup.com/trading/energy/crude-oil/light-sweet-crude.html
Unusual conditions right now
quote:
ConocoPhillips, a major U.S. oil producer, says it can make a profit on its U.S. shale wells as long as oil trades for more than $40 a barrel
quote:
There's not enough storage anywhere (SPR or offshore tanks) to make a dent at the world level. At this point the best place to store it is where it lays before you produce it.
quote:
ConocoPhillips, a major U.S. oil producer, says it can make a profit on its U.S. shale wells as long as oil trades for more than $40 a barrel
I don't know where the media gets their numbers. I'd be hard pressed to find a company exec that would publicly say they need $XX/oil: to make a profit / yield a 20% ROR / continue to drill in X basin. There's so much misinformation and so many people spouting off figures as if they are factual, it reminds me of Chip Brown's bullsheet tweets -> "sources are saying..."
quote:
There's not enough storage anywhere (SPR or offshore tanks) to make a dent at the world level. At this point the best place to store it is where it lays before you produce it.
quote:
ConocoPhillips, a major U.S. oil producer, says it can make a profit on its U.S. shale wells as long as oil trades for more than $40 a barrel
I don't know where the media gets their numbers. I'd be hard pressed to find a company exec that would publicly say they need $XX/oil: to make a profit / yield a 20% ROR / continue to drill in X basin. There's so much misinformation and so many people spouting off figures as if they are factual, it reminds me of Chip Brown's bullsheet tweets -> "sources are saying..."
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Must be confusing us with Houston. Who waste's time with a 3 series up here?
quote:I would guess loosely (due to economy strength/growth having some bearing on demand), but their inventories are separate. Cold snaps will have an upward effect on the nat gas price due to inventories decreasing. I'm just saying what I would think to be true here. I work in O&G but not a commodity expert.
Can anyone help explain how oil prices correlate to Natural Gas prices (NYMEX)? I noticed that Natural Gas has been on a tear today (up 9.5%).
quote:F-350 platinum with fender flairs and a lift kit.
Oil up $2.50 today?
Time to take out a lease on a new 3 series. Wait, this isn't Dallas.
quote:Very loosely, oil is traded globally where as gas is still pretty much only traded domestically which is why you have things like gas trading in japan and china for mid to upper teens, and barely cracking $3 in the us. So where oil is subject to global supply/demand curves and politics, gas is only subject to unique domestic politics and supply/demand, sometimes even local like the marcellus is currently dealing with a localized NG glutquote:I would guess loosely (due to economy strength/growth having some bearing on demand), but their inventories are separate. Cold snaps will have an upward effect on the nat gas price due to inventories decreasing. I'm just saying what I would think to be true here. I work in O&G but not a commodity expert.
Can anyone help explain how oil prices correlate to Natural Gas prices (NYMEX)? I noticed that Natural Gas has been on a tear today (up 9.5%).
quote:
Heard Archer completely closed their frac yard in Odessa....
quote:If companies are cutting back on drilling because of the price of oil, that would have an impact on the amount of new NatGas coming online. Lower oil for a significant amount of time could lead to higher gas prices.
Gas is on a different market than oil. I'm still bullish on gas right now due to domestic demand drivers (winter, power generation, abandonment of coal). I would be careful though. Many of the same companies dealing in gas are also dealing in oil. If their portfolios are tanking in one area, I don't see them spending a whole lot of capital in an other. I think most companies are batting down the hatches, bringing in the sails, and waiting this storm out. In any business, cash is king so when your debt is high and your hedges are about to expire, it can become a cancer to an organization.
Areas where I am more optimistic: midstream, distribution lines (lots of pipelines being replaced here), and demand driven industries like manufacturing, chemicals, and power generation/distribution.
quote:I remember Great White. They were terrible.quote:
Heard Archer completely closed their frac yard in Odessa....
We used them for frac and wireline for a couple of years in the Permian. At first when they were Great White and after they sold to Archer. Great White didn't have the best equipment but they had good hands. Archer bought all new equipment, but wouldn't pay to keep good hands. Odessa was a really poorly run yard and I assume their Union City yard was about the same as they constantly moved equipment and personnel back and forth. They were losing money in Odessa when oil was at its peak.
quote:quote:If companies are cutting back on drilling because of the price of oil, that would have an impact on the amount of new NatGas coming online. Lower oil for a significant amount of time could lead to higher gas prices.
Gas is on a different market than oil. I'm still bullish on gas right now due to domestic demand drivers (winter, power generation, abandonment of coal). I would be careful though. Many of the same companies dealing in gas are also dealing in oil. If their portfolios are tanking in one area, I don't see them spending a whole lot of capital in an other. I think most companies are batting down the hatches, bringing in the sails, and waiting this storm out. In any business, cash is king so when your debt is high and your hedges are about to expire, it can become a cancer to an organization.
Areas where I am more optimistic: midstream, distribution lines (lots of pipelines being replaced here), and demand driven industries like manufacturing, chemicals, and power generation/distribution.
quote:Agreed x 10.quote:quote:If companies are cutting back on drilling because of the price of oil, that would have an impact on the amount of new NatGas coming online. Lower oil for a significant amount of time could lead to higher gas prices.
Gas is on a different market than oil. I'm still bullish on gas right now due to domestic demand drivers (winter, power generation, abandonment of coal). I would be careful though. Many of the same companies dealing in gas are also dealing in oil. If their portfolios are tanking in one area, I don't see them spending a whole lot of capital in an other. I think most companies are batting down the hatches, bringing in the sails, and waiting this storm out. In any business, cash is king so when your debt is high and your hedges are about to expire, it can become a cancer to an organization.
Areas where I am more optimistic: midstream, distribution lines (lots of pipelines being replaced here), and demand driven industries like manufacturing, chemicals, and power generation/distribution.
It could. You're absolutely correct. The hold up, especially in Marcellus and Utica is the lack of infrastructure moving gas out of the region. We have a glut right now. Until the recently approved pipelines become operational things will be tough.