Research firm predicts the initial 15 percent jump in oil price will not have a long-term impact.

Following the largest single disruption of oil production in history—the attacks on Abqaiq and Khurais in Saudi Arabia—oil prices jumped an initial 15 percent.

flag

But research firm IHS Markit says the price jump resulting from the attacks in Saudi Arabia will not have any impact on the trajectory of 2019 U.S. shale production.

“Looking ahead, any effect on 2020 growth will also be muted unless prices are sustained above the mid-$70s level,” said Raoul Leblanc, executive director, IHS Markit.

Ten drones attacked the oil processing facility at Abqaiq and the nearby Khurais oil field on Sept. 14, which, caused a loss of 5.7 million barrels of crude production a day, or 50 percent of Saudi Arabia’s oil output, according to CNBC.

This resulting price increase has occurred during a time when U.S. producers have been beaten by financial markets for their profligate spending, the IHS Markit report said. As a result, shareholders should see the majority of a price windfall if it occurs.

The 15 percent surge in prices was one of the largest on record, but it the report noted that it came from a relatively weak base. Prices are still roughly $8 lower than in 2018 for West Texas Intermediate (WTI).

To gauge the impact on the shale patch, IHS Markit modeled the impact on production and cash flow of a $5/bbl and $10/bbl price increase from a base case around $62/bbl for 2020.

The base case assumes relatively conservative capital management, anticipating that producers will run a 10 percent cash surplus in 2020. IHS Markit estimates that for up to a $10/bbl price increase, 25 percent of the windfall would be reinvested to lift growth, while 75 percent would be used to return money to shareholders via debt repay, dividends and buybacks.

In this base case, IHS Markit predicted that:

  • Any price uplift would have a relatively muted effect on U.S. shale output. The base case price assumption delivers entry-to-exit growth in 2020 of around 480,000 b/d. A $5/bbl uplift only delivers an extra 50,000-75,000 b/d of growth (using the assumption of 25 percent reinvestment).
  • A $10/bbl price increase is more significant, lifting growth from the base by around 200,000 b/d to nearly 700,000 b/d. This is still much slower growth than 2018 and could be the deciding factor for global supply/demand balances.
  • “This is a zero-sum game between re-investment for growth and returning cash to shareholders,” Leblanc said. “Last time producers faced this choice as oil prices rose in early 2018, they ended up spending a large portion of that windfall, causing production to surge and eventually aiding the collapse of oil prices and their equity values. Expect things to be different this time around because investors are forcing them to respond differently.”