回到未来:美国页岩气正在崛起

在持续的整合和地缘政治不和谐中,Patch 的成熟度将在 2025 年接受考验。

美国页岩行业持续整合、2024 年挥之不去的主题以及不确定的政治前景迎接新的一年,该行业将利用更友好的政府和勘探与生产领域缓慢的资本回报。(来源:Shutterstock)

编者注:这是《石油和天然气投资者》系列文章中的第一篇,探讨了随着 E&P 进入 2025 年,页岩气的主要趋势——从电气化到并购再到基础设施需求。 

页岩气2025年展望

美国页岩油行业已经整合到上游企业数量仅为几年前的一半的地步。该行业已经成熟,其顶级盆地也已成熟。生产商经营着一个严密、高效的行业,该行业实行资本约束,向股东返还现金,收益率高于标准普尔 500 指数。新任总统是页岩油行业的忠实粉丝,他正在任命一个内阁,承诺让石油和天然气业务更容易开展。资本正在缓慢地——非常缓慢地——回归勘探与生产领域。

这个时机非常好,因为新的一年将伴随着挑战,这些挑战很可能会调动整个行业的所有资源。

TD Cowen 董事总经理戴维·德克尔鲍姆 (David Deckelbaum) 表示,2024 年挥之不去的主题——随着库存寿命的成熟,管理严格的资本结构;天然气基础设施、水资源管理和二叠纪盆地电气化方面的限制;以及不稳定的需求——将继续产生影响。

他告诉《石油和天然气投资者》(OGI)“我认为所有这些实际上只是另一种说法,即挑战将在 2024 年复制你在效率方面取得的成功。”

“难以想象你能在 25 天内实现同样的变化率。”

不过,定期的资本效率收益现在可能已经成为该行业未来战略的必要组成部分。

德克尔鲍姆表示,“如何平衡对更多资源的需求与进入更多次要区域的需要,同时又不导致资本效率下降,这仍然是一个至关重要的斗争。”

“少花钱多办事”

无论是从剩余的独立勘探与生产、钻机数量还是投入的资本来看,该行业在 2024 年都用更少的投入实现了更多的产出。

美国能源信息署 (EIA) 数据显示,8 月份美国石油产量创下新高,平均为 1340 万桶/日,超过之前月度最高水平 1330 万桶/日。EIA 预测 2024 年全年平均产量为 1320 万桶/日,超过 2023 年创纪录的 1290 万桶/日。

预计这一创纪录的增长势头将在 2025 年继续延续,届时美国能源信息署 (EIA) 预测美国石油产量将平均达到 1350 万桶/天。

但贝克休斯的数据显示,美国钻井数量在 2023 年开始呈下降趋势,较上年下降了 20% 。2024 年,钻井数量时好时坏。服务公司表示,截至 12 月 6 日当周,石油钻井数量增加了 5 个,达到 482 个,这是自 10 月中旬以来的最高数字,但仍比 2023 年同期少 6%。

继 2022 年和 2023 年支出逐步增加之后,大多数 E&P 公司的 2025 年预算与 2024 年相比持平。

PPHB 董事总经理詹姆斯·威克伦德 (James Wicklund) 表示,“我们正越来越善于用更少的资源做更多的事情。”

詹姆斯·维克伦德
James Wicklund,PPHB 董事总经理

“我们不再是全球石油和天然气增长市场,除非每年增长 1.5% 才被视为增长行业。我们的目标将是维持产量,而不是至少大幅增加产量。”

他说,以更少的钻机和服务成功创下生产记录是提高效率的结果。

威克伦德告诉OGI“如果效率增长继续超过需求增长,那么石油价格就会下降。现在,如果石油公司花费更少来生产相同数量的石油,他们就能赚更多的钱。”

德克尔鲍姆表示,效率提升和整合确实在 2024 年给该行业留下了印记。钻井时间、钻井速度和完井速度的提高表明,运营商正在用更少的资源做更多的事情。

他说道:“我认为,这是一个巨大的领域层面的主题,可能会在 2025 年带来相当不错的顺风。”

“特别是当你看到私人包裹的大量整合时,[和]其中一些效率收益被置于所收购资产之上,作为一种产生回报的方式。我认为这就是为什么你可以看到一些名称的绝对资本支出,就像可能由于效率收益,相对于生产的维护资本在边际上下降一样。”

分析师表示,2024 年的整合效益带来了效率的提升,这种效益将持续到 2025 年。

瑞银分析师表示,在某种程度上,小型和中型勘探与生产公司与大型勘探与生产公司之间 2.2 倍企业价值的估值套利将迫使公司进行整合。这一差距反映了公司通过整合获得的收益,即扩大规模以提高效率。

生产计划、预算基础

根据第三季度报告,大多数勘探与生产公司都计划在 2025 年停止维护计划,石油产量将持平。页岩油产量增长将发生在主要和大型生产商身上,包括EOG Resources康菲石油Diamondback Energy

如果宏观形势需要,大多数页岩气生产商都愿意推迟开采活动。摩根士丹利石油和天然气研究董事总经理德文·麦克德莫特 (Devin McDermott) 表示,他们倾向于利用效率提升来削减开采活动,而不是加速增长。

钻井和完井活动的效率提高,加上一些通货紧缩,将继续成为一些勘探与生产预算的顺风。这些进步使 Diamondback 的油井成本降低了 25 美元/英尺,使其能够将其 2025 年的资本支出计划减少高达 4 亿美元。西方石油公司在丹佛-朱尔斯伯格盆地的油井成本在 2024 年第一季度至第三季度之间下降了 20%,管理层表示,这一势头将持续到 2025 年。EQT预计,运营效率将使其新的一年的资本支出减少 5000 万美元。

气体上升到顶部

分析师对 2025 年油价的预测较为疲软,预计供应过剩将达到或略高于 100 万桶/天;摩根士丹利欧洲石油和天然气研究主管 Martijn Rats 估计,供应过剩可能高达 130 万桶/天。

瑞银对 2025-2026 年 WTI 油价的预测为每桶 71 美元,这反映了 OPEC+ 延长减产措施抵消了全球 GDP 增长放缓对需求的影响。不过,该银行预测其上游覆盖范围内的公司明年的平均资本收益率将达到 8%,超过标准普尔 500 指数。

瑞银董事总经理兼能源研究主管乔希·西尔弗斯坦 (Josh Silverstein) 在 12 月表示:“上涨动力来自非 OPEC 国家供应减弱和/或地缘政治影响导致供应减少;下跌动力来自非 OPEC 国家供应增强、OPEC+ 遵守情况不佳和/或需求减弱。”

瑞银已将2025年需求增长预期下调至101万桶/日,主要原因是中国需求减弱、美国总统大选的影响以及针对中国和其他国家可能出现的贸易政策变化。

瑞银预计,2025 年以后,受能源转型影响,石油需求增长将在 2026 年和 2027 年放缓至 80 万桶/日。

西尔弗斯坦表示:“我们预计全球石油需求将在 2029 年达到 1.063 亿桶/天的峰值,然后逐渐下降。”到 2030 年,电动汽车的普及率将取代全球乘用车每天 330 万桶的石油。

Evercore ISI 的 Stephen Richardson 可能说得最好:“2025 年的收支平衡很糟糕,需要 OPEC+ 继续采取行动来支撑价格。”

华尔街对 2025-2026 年天然气价格上涨的预测抵消了石油前景的疲软。尽管美国本土 48 个州目前供应过剩,但石油前景的疲软可能会支撑天然气价格。

瑞银的 Silverstein 将该银行对 2025-2026 年亨利中心天然气预期价格定为 3.35-3.75 美元/百万立方英尺,受需求上升(尤其是液化天然气出口)和支持供需平衡的活动减少的支撑。

瑞银预测,国内天然气供应将下降至每天 10 亿立方英尺的供不应求状态,这将为 2025 年的价格带来更强劲的前景。Silverstein 表示,公共和私人勘探与生产公司都将继续优先考虑自由现金流的产生,而不是产量的增长。

瑞银预计,长期来看,亨利港天然气价格将稳定在 3.50-4 美元/百万英热单位的范围内,这一改善受到液化天然气出口增长以及人工智能和数据中心发展带来的发电需求增加的推动。

“我们认为 2025 年能源行业的前景喜忧参半,”Silverstein 表示。“积极的一面是,我们看到天然气势头增强,行业整合带来的好处正在显现,随着资产负债表的改善,股东回报也在增加。然而,原油价格面临下行压力,有吸引力的估值可能不足以吸引新的投资者。”

天然气展望
(来源:美国能源信息署。公司报告,瑞银估计)

合并结转

根据美国能源信息署 (EIA) 的数据,2023 年,石油和天然气勘探与生产公司在并购上花费了约 2340 亿美元,这是自 2012 年以来的最高水平。Enverus 报告显示,到 2024 年中期,今年的上游并购活动已经有望超过 2023 年的 19 笔交易,价值超过 10 亿美元。

如果不是美国联邦贸易委员会 (FTC) 的缓兵之计,这一轨迹可能会更加戏剧化。该机构积极瞄准交易,而勘探与生产合并一直是 FTC 主席 Lina Khan 和参议院民主党人的目标。

事实上,自 2023 年秋季以来,大多数宣布的大型 E&P 交易的成交都因该机构的第二次通知要求而推迟。业内人士告诉OGI,石油和天然气行业出现如此频繁的通知并不常见

《哈特-斯科特-罗迪诺法案》授权联邦贸易委员会和司法部审查可能影响商业的拟议交易;这两个机构都可以采取法律行动阻止其认为会“大幅减少竞争”的交易。2023 年 12 月,这两个机构发布了更新的合并指南。其中包括:任何创建市场份额超过 30% 的公司的交易都可能存在问题。

受该指导方针约束的合并包括:

切萨皮克能源公司西南能源公司以 74 亿美元合并,成立Expand Energy

康菲石油公司以 225 亿美元收购马拉松石油公司;

埃克森美孚斥资 600 亿美元收购先锋自然资源公司

Diamondback Energy 斥资 260 亿美元收购传统私营生产商Endeavor Natural Resources;以及

佛龙斥资 530 亿美元收购赫斯公司 (Hess Corp.),而埃克森美孚对该交易提出质疑,因为其试图接管赫斯在圭亚那的资产。

薇琪·霍勒布
西方石油公司首席执行官 Vicki Hollub

但形势似乎正在向有利于该领域进一步整合的方向转变,许多高管表示,这是非常必要的。西方石油公司首席执行官维姬·霍卢布在 11 月哈特能源公司高管石油会议上表示,这不仅仅是剥离近期合并后增加到投资组合中的非核心资产。

“毫无疑问,不仅在二叠纪盆地,不仅在美国,而且在世界各地,都会出现整合,”霍卢布说。“大型公司将很难找到替代其产品的方法。这导致大型石油公司迫切需要进行并购,否则它们就会成为一家衰落的企业。”

2025 年似乎时机成熟,新政府将对石油和天然气采取比总统乔·拜登更为友好的立场。

当选总统唐纳德·特朗普已经列出了一系列高级机构职位的人选,其中包括接替汗的现任联邦贸易委员会五名委员之一的安德鲁·弗格森。

“新政府的一个方面是联邦贸易委员会(FTC)的审查力度会有所减弱,我认为这确实阻碍了 2024 年的一些交易。当然,我们看到几笔大型头条交易因联邦贸易委员会而放缓,”德克尔鲍姆说。“可以想象,在这种更为温和的环境下,你可能会看到行业整合持续进行。”

顶级运营商
(来源:Enverus)
公共运营商
(来源:Enverus)

游戏 2025 年并购

预计美国本土 48 个州的上游领域将出现整合。业内人士告诉OGI ,在完成了价值数十亿美元的重大交易后,二叠纪盆地仍有待整合。

德克尔鲍姆说:“由于多种原因,它引起了人们的强烈兴趣。”

马特洪峰快速管道于 10 月份投入使用,日均天然气输送量为 3.17 亿立方英尺。

他说,新的外送能力大概会开始缓解该盆地的天然气价格。

二叠纪一些次级台阶的成功测试正在引起人们的兴趣。

“我认为,人们将更加关注在 Permian 等地区增设围栏,而过去几年这些地区的报道可能没有那么多。当然,像 Woodford 这样的地区,像 Wolfcamp XY 这样的一些地区,我认为这些地区可能是人们最关注的地方,”Deckelbaum 说道。

他说,对液化天然气扩张的兴奋以及特朗普可能废除拜登政府对新液化天然气设施的暂停令,可能会增强墨西哥湾沿岸天然气盆地以及阿巴拉契亚山脉天然气盆地的活动。

页岩2025
主要石油公司和大型页岩油生产商计划在 2025 年及以后增加页岩油产量(来源:公司文件、摩根士丹利)

下一任总统将给华盛顿带来一大堆变数。鉴于特朗普与石油和天然气利益的密切关系,特朗普当选总统后最有可能出现的许多情况都对石油行业有利,但据报道,他的一些计划却引发了褒贬不一的反应。

他的承诺中的一些好处是显而易见的。

特朗普选择丹佛自由能源公司联合创始人、董事长兼首席执行官克里斯·赖特出任能源部长,支持他的正是页岩油气勘探开发专家、政策影响者哈罗德·哈姆。

这位当选总统还采纳了大陆资源公司首席执行官哈姆的建议,选择北达科他州州长道格·伯古姆担任内政部长和新成立的国家能源委员会主席。特朗普在一份声明中表示,该委员会旨在“通过减少繁文缛节、加强私营部门对所有经济部门的投资,以及通过专注于创新而不是长期存在但完全不必要的监管,来监督美国能源主导地位的道路”。

其他事项令人担忧。

特朗普曾多次承诺对所有进口产品征收关税,包括加拿大和墨西哥,尤其是中国。

“在他的竞选口号中,‘钻吧,宝贝,钻吧’的口号在他的大多数以石油为重点的竞选集会上再次出现,尤其是在宾夕法尼亚州等所谓的蓝墙州,这些州在 11 月被共和党夺得。特朗普承诺降低汽油价格,这将带来更多的石油供应;供应过剩也会降低石油价格,美国生产商表示,他们不太愿意看到石油供应激增和原油价格暴跌。

大多数分析师并不认为美国页岩油会屈服于当选总统的敦促。富国银行的罗杰·里德 (Roger Read) 表示,该银行预计勘探与生产企业的再投资率不会超过自由现金流,也不认为年度产量会再次出现过度增长。

“我们基于三个主要原因做出这一展望:页岩资源的成熟度、规模和所有权;投资者对回报的需求发生变化;以及公共和私人勘探与生产部门的整合。该行业的结构与高增长不符,”里德在 12 月的一份报告中表示。

特朗普的一些想法令人费解。例如,他承诺加快为高额投资者发放某些许可,并在自己的“真相社交”网站上发帖称:

“任何个人或公司在美国投资 10 亿美元或更多,都将获得全面快速的批准和许可,包括但不限于所有环境批准。准备好摇滚吧!!!”

但考虑到法规中内置的审查程序(如《国家环境政策法》所要求的程序),目前还不清楚这将如何运作。

此外,还有许多可能影响美国页岩油的地缘政治变量。

去年 12 月,OPEC+ 决定将每日 165 万桶的减产协议延长至 2026 年底。然而,分析师指出,该声明引发了一些担忧,其中最主要的是成员国的合规性问题。

Rystad Energy 大宗商品市场/石油全球主管 Mukesh Sahdev 表示,“很大程度上取决于特朗普 2.0 对美国产量增长和对伊朗 [和] 委内瑞拉的制裁以及对加拿大和墨西哥的关税将如何发挥作用。”

“推迟淘汰也表明,OPEC+承认中国需求疲软,鉴于特朗普可能对中国征收关税,预计短期内不会出现意外反弹。”

不过,里德表示,OPEC 的纪律性仍然令人担忧。即使 OPEC 表现出克制,里德也指出,还有其他不确定因素在起作用:中国需求趋势、关税/贸易风险、OPEC+ 纪律性、全球冲突缓和/加剧以及北半球的冬季天气。

2025 年石油和天然气价格展望
(来源:瑞银)
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Back to the Future: US Shale is Growing Up

The Patch’s maturity will be tested in 2025 amid ongoing consolidation and geopolitical dissonance.

Ongoing consolidation in the U.S. shale industry, the lingering themes of 2024 and an uncertain political outlook greet the new year, with the industry set to take advantage of a friendlier administration and the slow return of capital in the E&P space. (Source: Shutterstock)

Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of Oil and Gas Investor articles examining major shale play trends— from electrification to M&A to infrastructure needs— as E&Ps enter 2025. 

Shale 2025 outlook

U.S. shale has consolidated to the point that its upstream players number about half of just a few years ago. The industry is mature—and so are its top basins. Producers run a tight, efficient ship of an industry that exercises capital restraint, returns cash to shareholders and sports yields better than the S&P 500. The incoming president is a big fan and is naming a cabinet that promises to make it easier to do the business of oil and gas. And capital is slowly—very, very slowly—returning to the E&P space.

The timing is impeccable because the new year will carry with it challenges that will likely call upon all of the industry’s resources.

Lingering themes from 2024—managing a disciplined capital structure as inventory life matures; constraints around natural gas infrastructure, water management and Permian Basin electrification; and volatile demand—continue to resonate, said David Deckelbaum, managing director at TD Cowen.

“I think all of these are really just another way of saying that the challenges will be replicating the success that you have with efficiencies in 2024,” he told Oil and Gas Investor (OGI).

“It would be inconceivable that you would be able to achieve the same rate of change in ’25.”

Still, regular capital efficiency gains may now be a necessary part of the industry’s go-forward strategy.

“There’s still very much an existential struggle of how you balance the need for more resource [with] the need to go into more secondary zones while not showing a degradation of capital efficiency,” Deckelbaum said.

‘Doing more with less’

Whether in terms of remaining independent E&Ps, the rig count or capital invested, the industry did more with less in 2024.

U.S. oil production set a new record in August with an average of 13.4 MMbbl/d, topping the previous monthly high of 13.3 MMbbl/d, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). For the full-year 2024, the EIA forecast an average of 13.2 MMbbl/d, which topped the record 2023 annual average of 12.9 MMbbl/d.

And the record gain is expected to continue in 2025, when the EIA predicts U.S. oil production will average 13.5 MMbbl/d.

But the U.S. rig count began trending downward in 2023, when it fell 20% from the previous year, according to Baker Hughes data. The count moved in fits and starts in 2024. For the week ending Dec. 6, the number of oil rigs had increased by five to 482 rigs—the highest figure since mid-October, but still 6% less than the same time in 2023, the services firms said.

Following incremental spending increases in 2022 and 2023, most E&Ps are keeping their 2025 budgets flat compared to 2024.

“We’re getting better at doing more with less,” said James Wicklund, PPHB managing director.

James Wicklund
James Wicklund, managing director, PPHB

“We are no longer globally in a growth market for oil and gas [unless] growing by 1.5% a year is considered a growth industry. The goal is going to be to maintain production rather than to grow production, at least dramatically.”

Successfully setting production records with fewer rigs and services is a function of efficiency gains, he said.

“If efficiency gains continue to outpace demand growth, then oil prices go down. Now, if an oil company spends less to produce the same amount, they make more money,” Wicklund told OGI.

Indeed, efficiency gains and consolidation left a mark on the industry in 2024, Deckelbaum said. Advanced drilling times, drilling speeds and completion speeds demonstrated that operators are just doing more with less.

“I think that there was a huge field-level thematic that is probably going to carry some pretty nice tailwinds going into 2025,” he said.

“Particularly as you saw quite a bit of consolidation on private packages [and] some of those efficiency gains being laid on top of those acquired assets as a way of generating returns. It’s one of the reasons why I think you could see for some names, capital spending on an absolute basis, just as perhaps the maintenance capital relative to your production is going down on the margin because of efficiency gains.”

Consolidation benefits in 2024 came through with efficiency gains, analysts said, and that will continue in 2025.

In part, UBS analysts said, the valuation arbitrage of 2.2x enterprise value between small- to mid-size E&Ps and large cap E&Ps will force consolidation. The gap reflects the gains that companies made via consolidation, which heightened scale for greater efficiencies.

Production plans, budget base

Most E&Ps are budgeting for flat oil production off maintenance programs in 2025, according to third-quarter reporting. Shale growth will happen at the majors and large cap producers, including EOG Resources, ConocoPhillips and Diamondback Energy.

Most shale gas producers are open to deferring activity if the macro view calls for it. Their preference is to use efficiency gains to trim activity, not accelerate growth, said Devin McDermott, Morgan Stanley’s managing director of oil and gas research.

Efficiency gains in drilling and completion activity, coupled with some deflation, will continue to be a tailwind to some E&P budgets. These advances account for a $25/ft reduction in well cost at Diamondback, allowing it to reduce its 2025 capital expenditures plan by up to $400 million. Occidental Petroleum’s well costs in the Denver-Julesberg Basin dropped 20% between the first and third quarters of 2024, and management said that momentum will continue throughout 2025. EQT expects operational efficiency will reduce its capex by $50 million for the new year.

Gas rises to the top

Analysts’ estimates for 2025 oil prices are screening soft with expectations of surplus supply at or slightly above 1 MMbbl/d; Morgan Stanley’s head of European oil and gas research Martijn Rats reckons the surplus could be as much as 1.3 MMbbl/d.

The UBS outlook on oil of $71/bbl WTI in 2025-2026 reflects an offset of the OPEC+ extension of its supply cuts from slower global GDP growth weighing down demand. Still, the bank forecasts that companies within its upstream coverage universe will average an 8% return of capital yield next year, surpassing the S&P 500.

“Upside comes from weaker non-OPEC supply and/or geopolitical impacts reducing supply; downside comes from stronger non-OPEC supply, poor OPEC+ compliance, and/or weaker demand,” Josh Silverstein, UBS managing director and head of energy research, said in December.

UBS has lowered its 2025 demand growth estimate to 1.01 MMbbl/d based mainly on weaker Chinese demand, an impact of the U.S. presidential election and likely trade policy changes aimed at China and other nations.

Beyond 2025, UBS expects oil demand growth to moderate to 800,000 bbl/d in 2026 and 2027 from the weight of the energy transition.

“We expect global oil demand to peak at 106.3 million bbl/d in 2029 before gradually declining,” Silverstein said. A rising rate of electric vehicle uptake will replace 3.3 MMbbl/d of oil for passenger vehicles around the world in 2030.

Stephen Richardson at Evercore ISI might say it best: “Balances in 2025 are ugly, and continued OPEC+ action will be needed to support price.”

The weaker oil outlook is offset by Wall Street’s forecast of an increase in natural gas prices in 2025-2026. While the Lower 48 is currently oversupplied, the weaker oil outlook may support gas prices.

Silverstein at UBS puts the bank’s Henry Hub outlook price for 2025-2026 at $3.35-$3.75/MMcf, supported by rising demand—especially from LNG exports—and lower activity supporting the supply/demand balance.

UBS is forecasting domestic natural gas balances will decline into an undersupplied position of up to 1 Bcf/d, producing a stronger outlook for 2025 pricing. Both public and private E&Ps will continue to prioritize free cash flow generation over volume growth, Silverstein said.

Long-term UBS projects that Henry Hub prices will stabilize in a $3.50-$4/MMBtu range, an improvement driven by growing LNG exports and higher power generation demand from AI and data center development.

“We see a mixed outlook for energy in 2025,” Silverstein said. “To the positive side, we see natural gas momentum building, the benefits of sector consolidation coming through and shareholder returns ramping as balance sheets have improved. However, crude oil prices face downward pressure, and attractive valuations may not be enough to bring in new investors.”

natural gas outlook
(Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration. Company Reports, UBS Estimates)

Consolidation carryover

In 2023, oil and gas E&Ps spent some $234 billion on M&A—the most since 2012, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). And by mid-2024, the year’s upstream M&A activity was already tracking to top the 19 deals in 2023 valued at more than $1 billion, an Enverus report showed.

And that trajectory could have been more dramatic if not for the slow-walk tactics of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The agency has aggressively targeted dealmaking and E&P mergers have been in the crosshairs of FTC Chair Lina Khan and Senate Democrats.

Indeed, closing on most of the largest E&P deals announced since fall 2023 was delayed by the agency’s second notice requests. The flurry of notices was unusual in oil and gas, insiders told OGI.

The Hart-Scott-Rodino Act charges the FTC and the Department of Justice with review of proposed transactions that may affect commerce; either agency can take legal action to block deals that it believes would “substantially lessen competition.” In December 2023, the agencies released updated merger guidelines. Among them: any deal that creates a company with a market share greater than 30% could be problematic.

The mergers caught in the guidelines include:

Chesapeake Energy’s $7.4 billion merger with Southwestern Energy to create Expand Energy;

• ConocoPhillips’ $22.5 billion acquisition of Marathon Oil;

Exxon Mobil’s $60 billion purchase of Pioneer Natural Resources;

• Diamondback Energy’s $26 billion acquisition of legacy private producer Endeavor Natural Resources; and

Chevron’s $53 billion purchase of Hess Corp., a deal that Exxon is challenging because it seeks to take over Hess’ assets in Guyana.

Vicki Hollub
Vicki Hollub, CEO, Occidental Petroleum

But the tide appears to be turning in favor of more consolidation in the space, which many top executives say is greatly needed. And it’s more than simply divesting the noncore assets that recent mergers have added to the portfolio, Occidental Petroleum CEO Vicki Hollub said during Hart Energy’s Executive Oil Conference in November.

“Without a doubt, there’s going to be consolidation, not just in the Permian, not just in the U.S., but around the world,” Hollub said. “Large companies are going to have a very hard time replacing what they produce. That’s created a lot of need for the largest oil companies to do M&A—or they become a declining business.”

The timing appears to be ripe in 2025 for a new administration with a friendlier stance toward oil and gas than shown by President Joe Biden.

President-elect Donald Trump has already produced a litany of names for top agency jobs, including Andrew Ferguson, currently one of the FTC’s five commissioners, to replace Khan.

“One of the aspects of the new administration would be inherently a less scrutinous FTC, which I think did hinder some deals in 2024. And certainly, we saw several large headline deals being slowed by the FTC,” Deckelbaum said. “I would imagine that, in this more benign environment, you’ll likely see continued industry consolidation.”

top operators
(Source: Enverus)
public operators
(Source: Enverus)

Gaming 2025 M&A

Consolidation is expected across the upstream space in the Lower 48. After billions of dollars’ worth of significant deals, the Permian Basin remains in play for consolidation, insiders told OGI.

“It has compelling interest for a variety of reasons,” Deckelbaum said.

The Matterhorn Express Pipeline, which came online in October, is flowing an average of 317 MMcf/d of natural gas.

The new takeaway capacity will presumably start alleviating gas pricing locally in the basin, he said.

And the successful testing of some secondary benches in the Permian is gathering interest.

“I would expect that you’re just going to see more focus around additional fences in areas like the Permian that maybe didn’t get as much airtime over the last couple of years. Certainly, areas like Woodford, some areas like the Wolfcamp XY, I think that those are probably where you see the most focus,” Deckelbaum said.

Excitement around LNG expansion and the likelihood that Trump will repeal the Biden administration’s pause on new LNG facilities could heighten activity along the Gulf Coast gas basins, as well as those in Appalachia, he said.

Shale 2025
The Majors and Large Shale Producers Intend to Grow Shale Production in 2025 and Beyond (Source: Company Filings, Morgan Stanley)

The macro

The next president brings a whole deck of wildcards with him to Washington. While many of the most likely scenarios of a Trump presidency tip in favor of the industry, given Trump’s coziness with oil and gas interests, some of his reported plans have received mixed reactions.

Some of the good in his promises is obvious.

Trump’s choice of Chris Wright, co-founder, chairman and CEO of Denver-based Liberty Energy, for Secretary of Energy was endorsed by none other than shale wildcatter and policy influencer Harold Hamm.

The president-elect also followed the counsel of Hamm, CEO of Continental Resources, on choosing North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum as Interior Secretary and chairman of the newly formed National Energy Council. The council, Trump said in a statement, is designed to “oversee the path to U.S. ENERGY DOMINANCE by cutting red tape, enhancing private sector investments across all sectors of the Economy, and by focusing on INNOVATION over longstanding, but totally unnecessary, regulation.”

Other items are concerning.

• Trump has repeatedly pledged to levy tariffs on all imports, including Canada and Mexico, and especially China.

• Among his campaign ditties, chants of “drill, baby, drill” were revived at most of his oil-weighted campaign rallies, especially those in so-called blue wall states like Pennsylvania, which fell to the Republicans in November. Trump has promised to reduce the price of gasoline, which would come with more oil supply; oversupply reduces the price of oil, too, and U.S. producers have expressed little interest in watching oil supplies surge and the price of crude plummet.

Most analysts don’t see U.S. shale giving in to the president-elect’s urging. At Wells Fargo, Roger Read said the bank doesn’t expect a greater-than-FCF reinvestment rate among E&Ps, nor does it foresee a return to excessive annual production growth.

“We base this outlook on three key reasons: shale resource maturity, scale and ownership; changed investor demands for returns; and sector consolidation of both public and private E&Ps. The industry’s structure is inconsistent with high growth,” Read said in a December report.

And some of Trump’s ideas are head-scratchers. For example, he promised to fast-track certain permitting for high-dollar investors, posting on his Truth Social site:

“Any person or company investing ONE BILLION DOLLARS, OR MORE, in the United States of America, will receive fully expedited approvals and permits, including, but in no way limited to, all Environmental approvals. GET READY TO ROCK!!!”

But it’s unclear how that would work, given the review process that is built into statute, such as those required by the National Environmental Policy Act.

And then, there’s the bevy of geopolitical variables that could impact U.S. shale.

OPEC+ decided in December to extend its production cuts of 1.65 MMbbl/d though the end of 2026. However, analysts noted some concerns, not the least of which is member compliance, that hover over the announcement.

Mukesh Sahdev, Rystad Energy’s global head of commodity markets/oil, said “a lot depends on how the Trump 2.0 rhetoric on U.S. production growth and sanctions on Iran [and] Venezuela plays out along with tariffs on Canada and Mexico.

“The delayed phase-out also signals that OPEC+ acknowledges the weakness in Chinese demand and is not anticipating a surprise rebound anytime soon, given Trump’s possible tariffs against China.”

Still, OPEC discipline remains a concern, Read said. And even if OPEC shows restraint, Read points to other wildcards at play: Chinese demand trends, tariff/trade risks, OPEC+ discipline, easing/rising global conflicts and winter weather in the Northern Hemisphere.

2025 oil and gas price outlook
(Source: UBS)
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