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Early signs of a pullback in US oil drilling

Watch out, US shale boom: Plummeting oil prices are challenging the economics of expensive shale drilling. Low oil prices make shale drilling less profitable, and some oil companies are paring back spending and drilling plans as a result. 

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Gregory Bull/AP/File
Austin Mitchell walks away from an oil derrick outside of Williston, N.D. Lower oil prices, while good for the broader US economy, are a threat to what has been a surprising and dramatic surge in oil production in the US, and to drilling communities that have come to depend on oil money.

With oil prices low and showing no sign of an immediate rebound, the industry is beginning to pull back on spending.

Oil prices have dropped around听听since summer highs, raising fears among producers across the globe. Yet, many oil majors are relatively diversified, with large holdings downstream. For example, ExxonMobil and Chevron have been insulated in the third quarter because of their large holdings in refining. Steep declines in oil prices may hurt their production sectors, but with lower priced oil as an input, big oil鈥檚 refining assets become more profitable.

For the third quarter, ExxonMobil reported a听听compared to quarter three in 2013. That was largely driven by the Texas-based oil giant鈥檚听, which saw its profits rise by more than 70 percent from $592 million to $1.02 billion. Chevron鈥檚 refining program succeeded in quadrupling its profits in the third quarter, more than offsetting the hit the company has taken from the slide in oil prices. ()

Other companies that are not as large or integrated across various subsectors of the oil industry are not as shielded from the current soft price environment. And there are signs that a slowdown is beginning to take shape.

Oil services firm Baker Hughes reported听听in early November, with oil rigs declining by 14. With 1,568 rigs in operation, the oil rig count is now at its lowest level since August, and down 49 rigs since a peak in October. Rigs听听to 1,325 in 2015, according to some projections.

While some companies appear undaunted, vowing to maintain or even increase production, others are beginning to pare back spending plans. Continental Resources, a major oil producer in North Dakota鈥檚 Bakken play,听听that it won鈥檛 deploy more drilling rigs next year. Pioneer Natural Resources, with large holdings in the Eagle Ford and Permian basin, has hinted at more modest plans for 2015 due to lower oil prices.

The companies that service the oil producers are also on the frontlines, often feeling the brunt of a pullback in drilling activity quickly. Transocean, a major offshore oil drilling contractor, reported a nearly听听during the third quarter, which was 鈥渄ue primarily to the decline in the market valuation of the company's contract drilling services business.鈥 In other words, lower oil prices hurt demand for Transocean鈥檚 drilling rigs.

Transocean鈥檚 29 ultra-deepwater drilling rigs had accumulated听听in the third quarter. That was an enormous increase over the previous two quarters 鈥 110 days of out-of-service days in quarter two, and just 98 days in the first quarter. Even worse, the company expects the rigs to be inactive for a total of 435 days in the fourth quarter.

Short sellers are even stepping up their positions against oil field service companies as they sense an opportunity. Reuters听听on several European firms that are starting to come under fire from short sellers. ()

Nevertheless, the selloff in oil prices could be听. OPEC鈥檚 Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri tried to ease concerns,听听in Abu Dhabi on November 10. 鈥淧lease do not panic, things will fix itself,鈥 he said. On its face, that response would seem to suggest that OPEC thinks prices have bottomed out. On the other hand, Kuwait鈥檚 Oil Minister听听that OPEC will not cut its production target, and echoing al-Badri鈥檚 comments, he said that 鈥減rices will settle down once surplus oil is absorbed."

No decision has been made yet, and OPEC will meet at the end of November in Vienna to decide its next move. But merely allowing the market to sort itself out while maintaining current production levels will almost certainly spark a negative reaction in the oil markets.

That would put greater pressure on oil producers and oil service companies around the world, potentially forcing further cutbacks in production plans with the weakest players and the highest cost regions feeling the worst of it.

By Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com

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