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Two years
and one OPEC policy u-turn later, executives at the annual Oil & Money
conference in London painted an upbeat outlook for shale, with giants like
Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips saying the industry hasn't just survived
the bust, but will continue to have a global influence.
"We
have confirmed the viability of a very large resource base in North
America," said Exxon Chief Executive Officer Rex Tillerson. "Never
bet against the creativity and tenacity of this segment of our industry."
The
consequences will reverberate through the energy industry and the world
economy. A cohort of shale producers ready to boost output when prices rise
could cap any recovery at about $60 a barrel for the next couple of years,
regardless of any OPEC moves to cut production. Instead of falling victim to
the Saudi-led battle for market share, Tillerson said the industry will provide
the “spare capacity” to meet future demand.
Warning
Bells
It's a view
that puts Tillerson at odds with some of the industry most powerful voices,
including Khalid Al-Falih, the Saudi energy minister, and Patrick Pouyanne, the
CEO of French oil giant Total SA. Both men warned that two years of low prices
and investment cuts have left the global industry ill equipped to supply enough
oil by the end of the decade.
"Many
analysts are now sounding warning bells about future supply shortfalls and I am
in that camp," Al-Falih said.
Whether a
shortage arrives by the turn of the next decade is yet to be seen. Fatih Birol,
executive director of the International Energy Agency, said that oil prices of
about $50 to $60 a barrel can stimulate enough supply for short-term needs
until 2020. The Paris-based adviser has also warned about the long-term impact
of unprecedented cuts in spending.
In the
meantime, the industry's nearly unanimous view is that shale output can grow
again. The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects crude production to
start rising again in the first quarter of 2017, reaching 8.8 million barrels a
day by the end of next year from about 8.4 million now.
That would
still be short of the 9.6 million barrel-a-day peak in June 2015. Still, after
a two-year price war the industry has emerged battle-hardened, with executives
saying over panel discussions and cocktail parties in London that they are more
optimistic now they can weather low prices.
ConocoPhillips
CEO Ryan Lance told the conference on Tuesday that U.S. shale output will "come
back strongly" supported by lower costs. New oil wells are viable in the
Permian, Eagle Ford and Bakken shale basins at just $40 a barrel, he said.
"The
oil price is essentially unchanged from the conference last year, but the tone
from the companies seemed more optimistic," said Lydia Rainforth, oil
equity analyst at Barclays Plc in London.
"Most speakers at the conference referenced $50 to $60 a barrel as a
reasonable oil price for the oil market near term."
Junk Bonds
In an unusually
open speech, Andrew Gould, board director at state-owned Saudi Arabian Oil Co.,
said that a $50-to-$60 a barrel price would be "sufficient to develop the
low-cost resources to provide increases that will be necessary over the next
three to four years."
West Texas
Intermediate, the U.S. oil benchmark, which closed at the highest price in 15
months on Wednesday, lost 74 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $50.86 at 12:48 p.m.
London time.
Perhaps the
best indicator of the changing fortune of shale is the plunge in yields of junk
energy debt. At its worst in February, investors sold off shale bonds, pushing
yields to a record 21 percent. Today, they are trading at 7 percent, a level
similar to when oil traded at about $100 a barrel.
"The
equity and debt market is open for U.S. shale companies", said
David Foley, CEO of Blackstone Energy Partners LP, the private equity fund. After
a two-year hiatus, initial public offerings have returned to the American oil
patch, with Extraction Oil & Gas LLC raising $633 million this month.
It isn't
just shale producers expressing more optimism. Major oil companies also hailed
a new environment, with BP Plc CEO Bob Dudley saying the company will be able
to balance its books next year at about $55 a barrel, not far above current
prices.
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