石油价格


本月早些时候,达拉斯联储 报告称 ,当地石油行业对未来变得更加乐观,预计价格上涨并扩大产量。事实上,达拉斯联储报告称第三季度产量增长加快。

尽管油价上涨,美国页岩油生产商仍保持谨慎态度-石油和天然气360

资料来源:石油价格

然而,能源情报署却传达了不同的 信息:它预测整个页岩气田的产量将持续下降,其中以二叠纪盆地(目前美国最多产的页岩油田)为首。

从表面上看,这些信息是相互矛盾的。然而,在表面之下,他们仍然描绘了一个已经成熟的行业图景,即使价格大幅上涨也不会刺激更多的活动,因为该行业还有其他优先事项。

西德克萨斯中质原油价格已连续一周保持在每桶 90 美元以上,很少有分析师预计其走势会很快逆转,尤其是在 OPEC+ 本周维持产量上限的情况下。

俄克拉荷马州库欣的库存处于历史低位,接近临界最低水平,为价格上涨增添了动力。它们可能会进一步下跌,这可能会加剧价格上涨。

然而,尽管雪佛龙和先锋自然资源等一些大型生产商 预计 其页岩油面积的产量会更高,但这并不是该行业的默认设置。钻机数量仍远低于去年同期,没有迹象表明出现快速且有意义的逆转。事实上,上周钻井数量 降至 2022 年 2 月以来的最低水平。与此同时,WTI 的交易价格仍高于每桶 90 美元。

如果有人对美国页岩油行业已经发生变化心存疑虑,那么现在是时候打消这些疑虑了。这个行业已经发生了变化,一旦价格上涨超过一定水平,它就不再增加钻机。谨慎是现在的游戏名称。谨慎、高效,以及资本纪律。它对大小玩家都有效。

“如果您考虑资本效率,并且希望确保从长远考虑您的业务,那么频繁上下移动[钻机]并不是一个好主意,”埃克森美孚高级副总裁杰克·威廉姆斯 告诉 《华尔街日报》。

与此同时,尽管风险调整后的回报良好,但投资者仍然不希望投资石油和天然气。我不认为他们会回来。达拉斯联储调查的一位受访者表示,这次情况有所不同 

此外,“小型独立企业的外部资本仍然几乎不存在,这限制了对有机现金流的投资”。另一位达拉斯联储调查受访者表示,对非页岩常规生产的兴趣非常有限,而三分之一的受访者表示,该公司的银行已经取消了负责石油行业业务的银行官员的职位。

无论国际市场油价如何,投资者外流(至少对于页岩油领域规模较小的企业而言)以及资金来源有限都是不提高产量的严重原因。

除了这些挑战之外,成本通胀仍然是一个问题,尽管今年早些时候有所缓解。正如行业高管今年早些时候指出的那样,库存也是一个问题,因为最好的钻探地点已经耗尽。

政府在能源领域的政策目前也不利于增加产量,这不仅直接通过减少租赁销售来实现,而且还因为它们与银行决定避开石油领域的客户有很大关系。有趣的是,如果共和党明年获胜,这种情况是否会改变,但就目前情况而言,石油行业与联邦政府存在分歧,这一点在生产计划中得到了体现。

美国页岩油行业目前的情况是一个受到追捕和防御模式的行业。这对联邦政府来说是非常不幸的,因为它不能再重复去年为平息油价和修复总统崩溃的支持率而采取的库存抽调举措。另外不幸的是,明年是选举年。

根据最近的报告和调查,页岩油行业不太可能改变其新的生产方式。它这样做的动机为零。公众股东坚持要求更多现金,而不是更多桶;私人参与者需要谨慎支出;温和地说,两人都对不太喜欢他们的联邦政府保持警惕。

在这种情况下,仅仅因为价格上涨而提高产量简直就是一个奇迹——这是一个不太明智的决定。既然这不是童话,就不会有奇迹。将会有更长的时间更高的价格。在没有额外供应的情况下,价格监管将归结为需求,而众所周知,石油需求缺乏弹性,这意味着这需要一段时间。

 

作者:Irina Slav for Oilprice.com


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Earlier this month, the Dallas Fed reported that the local oil industry was getting more upbeat about the future, expecting higher prices and expanding production. In fact, the Dallas Fed reported that production growth had sped up in the third quarter.

U.S. shale producers remain cautious despite oil rally-oil and gas 360

Source: Oil Price

The Energy Information Administration, however, had a different message: it forecast a continued decline across the shale patch, led by the Permian—the most prolific shale play in the U.S. right now.

On the face of it, these messages were conflicting. Below the face, however, they still paint the same picture of an industry that has matured to the point where even a substantial price rally does not spur more activity because the industry has other priorities.

West Texas Intermediate has been trading above $90 per barrel for a week now, and few analysts expect it to reverse course anytime soon, especially as OPEC+ is this week seen maintaining its production caps.

Inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma, are at a historic low, close to the critical minimum, adding fuel to the price rally. And they may dip further, which would likely intensify the price climb.

Yet, while some large producers such as Chevron and Pioneer Natural Resources expect higher production from their shale acreage, this is not the default setting of the industry. The rig count is still considerably lower than it was this time last year, with no signs of a fast and meaningful reversal. In fact, the number of rigs fell last week to the lowest since February 2022. All this while WTI trades above $90 per barrel.

If anyone had lingering doubts that the U.S. shale industry has changed, it is time to put these to bed. The industry has changed, and it no longer adds rigs the moment prices rise above a certain level. Caution is the name of the game now. Caution and efficiency, along with capital discipline. It is valid for players large and small.

“If you think about capital efficiency, and you want to make sure you’re thinking long-term about your business, moving [drilling rigs] up and down a lot is not a good idea,” Exxon senior VP Jack Williams told the Wall Street Journal.

At the same time, “Investors still do not want oil and gas exposure despite healthy risk-adjusted returns. I don’t think they are coming back. It’s different this time,” according to a respondent to the Dallas Fed’s survey.

Also, “Outside capital for small independents remains almost nonexistent, which limits investment to organic cash flow. Interest in non-shale conventional production is very limited,” another Dallas Fed survey respondent said, while a third said the company’s bank had eliminated the position of the bank officer in charge of business with the oil industry.

An outflow of investors, at least for smaller players in the shale field, and limited sources of funding are both serious reasons not to boost production, whatever oil prices on international markets.

On top of these challenges, cost inflation remains a problem, too, despite some easing earlier this year. Inventory is also a problem, as noted earlier in the year by industry executives, as the best drilling locations get depleted.

Government policies in the energy sector are also not conducive to more production at this time, not only directly through fewer lease sales, but also because they have a lot to do with banks’ decision to shun clients from the oil patch. It would be interesting to see whether, in case of a Republican win next year, this would change, but as things stand now, the oil industry is at odds with the federal government, and it shows in production plans.

The picture of the U.S. shale industry right now is one of an industry hunted and in defense mode. It is quite unfortunate for the federal government because it can no longer repeat the inventory draw move it made last year to calm prices at the pump and mend the President’s collapsing approval ratings. It is additionally unfortunate because next year is an election year.

The shale industry is unlikely to change its new approach to production, based on recent reports and surveys. It has zero motivation to do that. Shareholders in the public players insist on more cash, not more barrels; the private players need to be careful with their spending; and both are wary of a federal government that does not like them very much, to put it mildly.

In such a situation, it would have been nothing short of a miracle—or a not very bright decision—to boost production just because prices are higher. Since this is not a fairytale, there will be no miracles. What there will be is higher prices for longer. In the absence of additional supply, price regulation will come down to demand, and demand for oil is notoriously inelastic, which means it will take a while.

 

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com