Famous last words.
Few things I'd add here:nu awlins ag said:
"The inventory numbers are significant - refineries seemed to jump back to activity, gasoline demand jumped back so that's definitely positive," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago. "It seems that we're back on the track of the drawdown on supplies."
Just before this, it was demand worries because of the pandemic, which has been constant since April/May. Face it, demand here in the states has been increasing, so all this crap about "demand and the pandemic" are slightly over played at this point. With the hurricane, production of 2-4 million barrels has been shut in, which is a good amount since last week's draw was 4.4 million, down to 496 million which is at the lowest point since April. This is where prices should be in my opinion based on all over information.
The kiss of death for shale was negative oil prices and Wall Street's pullback.realwizardharry said:
EOG exploring in Oman... is this the kiss of death for shale?
Do the oil guys in the Delaware have MVC on the pipelines?CPDAggie10 said:
I spent the week in Carlsbad, NM for work and I have never seen the man camp so full. It was near 100% capacity. There are lots of frack crews out there completing DUCs right now. Saw very few rigs on the horizons.
topher06 said:
There should be almost no L48 oil drilling right now, but people are going to continue to put holes in the ground as long as they can to justify their jobs and to cash flow debt. If they haven't already done it on any RBLs, I would expect significant additional cash sweep provisions being forced into existing facilities during this redetermination.
Think they could cash flow back most of the debt, but maybe I'm wrong. I know a lot of people have jobs that need the Permian to keep pumping money into the ground though, but I think the banks are wising up.CaptnCarl said:
E&P CEO in letter to shareholders and employees:
"We have decided to cease all operations including drilling and completions to sacrifice the company for the greater good of oil supply and demand economics. We wish to no longer remain competitive and try to keep your jobs and investments alive because some guy on an online message board said it's what we should be doing. We are therefore throwing in the towel."
McKinsey in general is a scam with many of their experts being booksmart but real world inept.Lester Freamon said:
That new VP for Strategy and ESG, the ex McKinsey chick, is a total nut case. Watched her video on their new strategy and I felt like I was watching the O&G edition of Silicon Valley.
Exactly what you would expect from ex McKinsey rolling out ESG initiatives as "strategy" at a major
topher06 said:Think they could cash flow back most of the debt, but maybe I'm wrong. I know a lot of people have jobs that need the Permian to keep pumping money into the ground though, but I think the banks are wising up.CaptnCarl said:
E&P CEO in letter to shareholders and employees:
"We have decided to cease all operations including drilling and completions to sacrifice the company for the greater good of oil supply and demand economics. We wish to no longer remain competitive and try to keep your jobs and investments alive because some guy on an online message board said it's what we should be doing. We are therefore throwing in the towel."
But she has a unique accent...Boodlum said:McKinsey in general is a scam with many of their experts being booksmart but real world inept.Lester Freamon said:
That new VP for Strategy and ESG, the ex McKinsey chick, is a total nut case. Watched her video on their new strategy and I felt like I was watching the O&G edition of Silicon Valley.
Exactly what you would expect from ex McKinsey rolling out ESG initiatives as "strategy" at a major
I dealt with them as part of a transformation project for about 2 years and I was constantly amazed at how incompetent they were.
You're welcome to poke at me all you want, it is a message board. I just don't think these decisions, except at the best run companies, are going to remain in management's hands much longer. The debtholders are going to force the issue, and I suspect these teams are completing wells while they have some liquidity ahead of the next redetermination. There will probably be even more busted covenants this time.CaptnCarl said:topher06 said:Think they could cash flow back most of the debt, but maybe I'm wrong. I know a lot of people have jobs that need the Permian to keep pumping money into the ground though, but I think the banks are wising up.CaptnCarl said:
E&P CEO in letter to shareholders and employees:
"We have decided to cease all operations including drilling and completions to sacrifice the company for the greater good of oil supply and demand economics. We wish to no longer remain competitive and try to keep your jobs and investments alive because some guy on an online message board said it's what we should be doing. We are therefore throwing in the towel."
Please understand I'm not poking at you. I'm satirically pointing out that ceasing D&C is only going to happen if it's in the best interest of the company, not the market.
I think it's more about managing a down cycle than preserving jobs.
Should've said this latest price crash. Shale is now a short cycle investment in the portfolio with the large international and GOM discoveries being the new focus of reserve growth.realwizardharry said:
Agree on the WS pullback, but I don't think negative prices had a material, long-term impact on the E&P side. Regardless, EOG looking for greener pastures is pretty wild to me.
Cyp0111 said:
McKinsey is all that is wrong w capitalism.
Cyp0111 said:
They will and they will destroy value for their unsecureds which now are equity owners.
I meant to say the CHKS of the world should no longer exist.