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Oil: Saudis Are Cutting? Well, U.S. Is Producing More and More

Published 08/19/2023, 01:22 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM
  • U.S. crude production hits three-year highs for two weeks despite a 15% drop in drilling rigs.
  • Improved production efficiency and technology advancements lead to higher output.
  • Increasing U.S. crude exports also contribute to global market influence.
  • Of all the news that caught the interest of oil traders this week, the one that really hit home was probably the EIA’s revelation that U.S. crude production had reached three-year highs — for a second week in a row.

    It was quite astounding that the Energy Information Administration would say that, when the number of rigs drilling for oil in the country had tumbled double-digits this year. 

    ​​From a 2023 high of 623 on Jan 13, the U.S. oil rig count had dwindled to just 520 as of Aug 18 — down 15%. 

    Even so, the EIA estimated domestic crude production at 12.7 million barrels per day for the week ended Aug 11, overwriting its previous daily projection of 12.6M during the prior week to Aug 4.

    Before these back-to-back weeks, the agency had never projected such a high number for U.S. oil production, which it had maintained at between 12M and 12.2M barrels per day over the past year, since output began recovering from the 9.7M low seen in the aftermath of the coronavirus outbreak. Production was at a record high of 13.1M barrels daily in March 2020, just as the pandemic was setting in.

    The oil output estimate contained in the EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report isn’t the only one by the agency that gives an idea of what the world’s largest driller of the commodity is doing in terms of output. Those following the oil market must also stay on top of the Drilling Productivity Report (obliquely known as the DPR) and the Short-Term Energy Outlook (or STEO) to get a holistic picture of what’s going on.

    According to the latest issue of the DPR on Aug 14, output in the Permian, the largest shale oil producing basin in the United States, is projected to be at 5.799M barrels per day in  September, down 13,000 from August. That decline would come on top of the previous month’s estimated daily decline of 9,500 barrels, putting Permian output at its lowest since February, historical DPR data suggests. 

    The same DPR report, however, says that output in the Bakken, the second-largest U.S. shale play, is expected to reach its highest since November 2020 by next month, with an estimated output of 1.21M barrels daily in September. That would be 3,600 barrels per day more than in August and July’s increase of 5,200.

    That’s not all.

    Oil production in new U.S. wells is projected to reach 1,694 barrels per day for each rig in the Bakken, up from 1,686 previously. For the Permian too, this is seen rising — despite the overall production drop — and has been forecast to be marginally higher at 1,079 barrels daily for each rig compared with a previous 1,073. At Eagle Ford (NYSE:F), originally the second-largest U.S. oil-producing region, new oil well production per rig is also seen rising to 1,453 barrels daily from 1,439.

    The STEO takes the EIA’s high estimates for U.S. oil production even higher. The latest version of this, published Aug 15 (a day after the DPR), says output is expected to average 12.81M barrels per day in the third quarter of this year and 12.93M by the fourth. Even more startling, by the second quarter of 2024, U.S. production is seen rising to 13.01M per day, before reaching 13.08M in the third and 13.27M by the fourth. Essentially, it means U.S. production will be at a new record high by the end of next year.

    Efficiency Over Volume in U.S. Oil Drilling

    Anyone who read about the tumbling U.S. rig count at the outset of this story and now looking at this production estimate will probably gasp. How the hell is this possible, any person of average intelligence would ask. Unsurprisingly, the same person would likely have the answer, too: higher production efficiency. 

    It’s true that U.S. drillers are at their most disciplined ever when it comes to production, not putting to work a single rig more than needed to keep capital expenditure at the lowest possible and maximize bottomline per barrel. It’s all in an effort to return as much cash as they can to shareholders. It’s an incredible shift in attitude since the heyday of the U.S. boom in oil fracking, which is shorthand for the hydraulic fracturing process and horizontal drilling versus vertical that made the country a bigger oil producer than Saudi Arabia and Russia. 

    Back in 2014, when prodigious amounts of new oil was first spurting out of the Permian, Eagle Ford and Bakken, drillers, who included Mom-and-Pops jumping into the scene akin to a gold rush, stuck rigs everywhere, with nary a care about supply-demand balance. “Drill baby, drill!” epitomized the industry. Banks, excited at the prospect of what was virtually a “blue ocean” within the oil game, did little diligence too in lending. It took three price collapses and countless shale bankruptcies — in 2014-2016, then 2018 and finally, the pandemic-induced 2020 — to change that.

    Today, the shale patch consists of majors such as Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM), Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and established drillers like Devon (NYSE:DVN), Pioneer (NYSE:PXD) and Continental.

    The days of carefree production are over and U.S. oil drillers, in fact, are squeezing output wherever possible, like the rest of their brethren in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries — much to the delight of the Saudis, who lead that so-called OPEC cartel. Hostility apparently shown towards the U.S. oil community by the fossil-fuel-discouraging Biden administration — and returned with a wilful lowering of production — is another source of delight for the Saudis. But more than these, the new-age American driller is more concerned about lifting a barrel at the lowest cost possible than preserving the U.S. pride of being the largest oil producer.

    Therein, comes the phenomenon in drilling efficiency that we have today — and why U.S. oil production continues to climb despite the continued drop in rig count.

    Global Impacts

    In June, Exxon Mobil Chief Executive Darren Woods said he aims to double the amount of oil produced from the company's U.S. shale holdings over a five-year period using new technologies.

    In December 2022, the oil major introduced a five-year technology development program for drilling after postponing for two years — until 2027 — its goal of pumping up to 1 million barrels per day in the Permian, citing legacy pandemic-related delays. 

    Also in the Permian, Pioneer’s lateral lengths in drilling have grown from a previous benchmark of just 5,000 feet to average 10,000 feet, some even reaching as much as 20,000, say those in the know. 

    John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital, says:  

    “Enhanced completion designs have been a factor in lowering breakeven costs for the Permian, which is about $19 a barrel for Pioneer, including drilling and development costs. Back in 2018, it was as high as $28."

    Pioneer has seen increased drilling efficiencies recently as well. Reports from Pioneer, which is the largest acreage holder in the Midland Basin, says it takes the company 15 days now to drill a vertical well at between 10,000 and 20,000 feet. That compares with the 2015 span of almost 20 days to drill a horizontal well to 10,000 feet. The lifting of a U.S. export ban on pad drilling designs, which include increasing the numbers of wells on a pad, also have contributed to low breakevens in the Permian.

    Nick Dole, a retired shale drilling engineer, cites data from Enverus, an oil gas and services firm, that says the drop in output from U.S. shale wells is “forcing oil drillers to work harder to keep production from slipping”.

    Added Dole in comments to Investing.com:

    “The premium areas that are considered the top tier acreage are getting drilled up faster than anticipated. However, the industry is always one new technology away from doing better in the tier 2 and 3 areas. They invest a lot in R&D to keep that oil flowing.

    When I first got into the industry the U.S. was on a steady oil decline and the US producers worked very hard and spent tons of money on shale technology, which I was a part of. We had many ‘train wrecks’ that were extremely costly. If it wasn’t for those things, the Saudis/OPEC would have us begging about now. Sometimes that is forgotten.”

    The unspoken truth about U.S. oil production and drilling efficiency: While companies want to do less in terms of output, they are actually cranking out more economically by being razor-focused on getting the most out of a barrel, at the lowest cost possible. And since they’re competing with one another, they don’t reveal their innermost trade secrets, often leaving uncontested public opinion that they’re driven more by their hostility towards Biden than bottomline (that’s the bull that oil bulls like to believe in). 

    Those long oil begrudgingly acknowledge the efficiency of American drillers — a notion that doesn’t help the narrative that additional Saudi production cuts of a million barrels per day since July would leave the U.S. high and dry of oil most needed in the coming months.

    Phil Flynn, energy analyst at Chicago’s Price Futures Group who’s closely followed by oil bulls, questioned the methodology used by the EIA:

    “What is more concerning … is that the increase in oil production might not be actual barrels of new oil but due to what the EIA said last week was a ‘crude oil production re-benchmarking'. That changes the way the EIA calculates its weekly production estimates.”

    It’s interesting that those long oil, who spend much of their energy debunking the EIA’s higher production estimates, do not talk much about U.S. crude exports which are making greater and greater inroads in the very same markets that the Saudis consider as sacred to them.

    Flynn, whom I follow, too, for contrary insights to what I write, noted to his credit that U.S. oil exports surged by 2.2 million barrels per day in the latest week to Aug 11, the largest weekly rise since August 2022, or in a year. U.S. crude exports, at just shy of 4.6M per day in the week were what caused a drop of 1.76 million barrels daily in net imports, Flynn reasoned. 

    Epilogue

    Last week’s export number was just part of a broader story about U.S. oil shipments.

    Surging U.S. crude exports in 2023 are pushing down oil prices in Europe and Asia, proving a key source of supply as producers cut output and sanctions on Russian crude disrupt trade flows, according to a Reuters report from Aug 6.

    The introduction in June of U.S. crude grade WTI Midland to set the price of the dated Brent benchmark assessed by S&P Global Commodity Insights has not only spurred the rising exports but also helped to cap Brent and the European, African, Brazilian and Asian oil that are priced off the benchmark, traders and analysts said in the report. 

    U.S. crude exports have averaged 4.08 million barrels per day so far in 2023, up from an average of 3.53 million bpd in 2022, the report noted.

    Most importantly, it cited these:

    “U.S. crude exports are also easing the loss of supply after Saudi Arabia deepened output cuts from July, above what major producers agreed to in June.”

    The widening exports illustrate the increasing influence of crude from the U.S., the world's biggest oil producer, in the global market. It further cements the role of U.S. supplies in balancing the market, especially as outlets for sanctioned Russian crude are limited.”

    Epilogue: The Saudis are cutting, but the U.S. is producing more and more. 

    ***

    Disclaimer: The content of this article is purely to inform and does not in any way represent an inducement or recommendation to buy or sell any commodity or its related securities. The author Barani Krishnan does not hold a position in the commodities and securities he writes about. He typically uses a range of views outside his own to bring diversity to his analysis of any market. For neutrality, he sometimes presents contrarian views and market variables. 

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Latest comments

Nice article Mr. Barani.  I replied to someone else, but in case you don't see it.  Many of the wells being frac'd now have been sitting there for months (some longer).  So the wells that are being frac'd now may not be reflective of the current rig count or any rig count since every company keeps a different frac schedule.  There are also logistical concerns and lease terms that impact when wells are frac'd as some leases require a well to be drilled and put to production within a certain time frame while other leases are very generic and the operator can do the frac job whenever it is convenient logistically and the well may sit there for months waiting.  I have seen wells drilled and completed as soon as the rig is moved off location and some that have sat there across the road uncompleted for months.  Since shale wells produce the most oil in first month and decline rapidly, there could be some issue with tying rig count to oil per rig. Just something to keep in mind.
Thanks much for contributing to this story, as well as the granular discussion. I replied to your original thread on this. Let me know if I'm reading it correctly. Thanks again.
oh yea you believe in the data, just like the vax is safe and effective
cut no cut . Oil is up with Biden . I wish he win again. Oil will be an easy trade
Still not ideal is it, it means a flood of dollar debt is going back into America for the loss of oil. Should mean treasury yields could move higher and banks will be under pressure. Sanctions on Russia are backfiring bigly, because the Saudi's are only cutting oil to compete with Russia's low oil prices forced on by sanctions.
Saudis cut supply to get price higher. They are helped by Russian sanctions, but in somewhat different way than your message implies. The sanctions have effected decline in Russian output, which came with one-year delay as it should. Declining Russian production leaves Saudis without competition, making easier for them to squeeze the market.
People, some creative c(lown) has created a fake ID of me fronting for a financial advisory of some kind. It's unbelievable, the depth these jokers can go to. They don't have what it takes to articulate themselves, so they resort to gutter. How desperate are you really?
Yeah It kinda seemed aimed at making you look bad and to make you lose credibility that's not right you have your opinions even if we sometimes disagree. I think if there are disagreements then they should counter with fair arguments not low blows like that.
 Thank you. Truly appreciate your standing here. We all have differing opinions, of course. The point is not to lose civility. To me, courtesy is a two-way street. I respond in exactly the same way I'm engaged. We have had serious disagreements, you and me; that has never resulted in either being abusive to the other. Thank you again.
You mean the same kind of joke as pretending to be a professional writer and actually being nothing more than a political hack?
Barani: How likely do you think it is that the Saudis rethink their strategy and flood the market with oil again if US Shale keeps rising?
Honesty is one if the rarest commodities today, especially in the media, the government, and the investment world.
This government is full of unelected, inept fools, doing everytbing they can for a pension on the tax payers dime supported by people like you who think they’re somehow doing good. That’s delusional at best.
 This is Nick Dole, an ex-shale engineer. He's also commented on this story and you're welcome to reach out to him: "I just feel that there are a lot of moving parts that are often overlooked.  The conspiracy theories are rather silly (the numbers are being changed to make it look better for the this administration for instance).  Why cook the books now, when they could have been "fixed" a couple of years ago and slowed or even stopped the oil price increases? I have an understanding of how the various operators manage things after working for both large and small operators.  And I understand the technical side which I keep up with, so I discuss those things that impact production at least to some degree.  That drilling rig count is important, but if we had the monthly effective footage drilled (productive zone footage), a bbls per frac'd lateral foot along with the number of feet frac'd per month would give a better picture of where we are headed with US production - just my opinion."
 Have you gotten in touch with Nick Dole for further clarity on the situation?
ok so I am confused we use 20 million barrels a day we produce 12 million barrels a day and export 4 million (most likely to be refined and returned at a higher cost since we have been bleeding refineries for decades) how is that good? Lol either you "analysts" struggle with basic math and common sense or you are part of the "truth can be redefined" crowd...either way the leaders in this country need to start telling the truth (So America can remain the land of the free and the home of the brave).
You are comparing refinery output (20 mbd) to crude oil field production (12.6 mbd). The difference is from natural gas liquids and biofuels. Markec Huber will have to find another reason to besmear Biden.
Brad, they're all here to trash Biden and lick the feet of the Saudis, whom they regard paragons of virtue. That's comical knowing what sort of deceit the Salman brothers are capable of, especially the murderous younger one.
Youre garbage bro. Screwed you and the Saudis.
Producing more despite low rig count? something fishy, it seems they don't want high crude to be a reason for market plunge
 Once again, thanks much for the great insight, mate! You add such clarity to my discussions on oil. Your take on the DUC will be illuminating to those who pile on to the reading for the sole objective of telegraphing to their audience producer disinterest in new drilling. That's oversimplifying it is my takeaway, and you seem to suggest the same. Correct me if I'm wrong.
 I just feel that there are a lot of moving parts that are often overlooked.  The conspiracy theories are rather silly (the numbers are being changed to make it look better for the this administration for instance).  Why cook the books now, when they could have been "fixed" a couple of years ago and slowed or even stopped the oil price increases? I have an understanding of how the various operators manage things after working for both large and small operators.  And I understand the technical side which I keep up with, so I discuss those things that impact production at least to some degree.  That drilling rig count is important, but if we had the monthly effective footage drilled (productive zone footage), a bbls per frac'd lateral foot along with the number of feet frac'd per month would give a better picture of where we are headed with US production - just my opinion.  Thanks for the reply.
 Illuminating! Thanks again :)
The picture of Earth in 2200A.D. : Mars.
Your conclusion might be a bit premature. So far, studies of Mars did not confirm presence of democrats in past history of the planet.
ako si to mam dat na ucet prevod ja som slovenka dakujem
Oil numbers are altered by WH..and have been for a while…supply going down…demand going up..have a nice day.
In a global recession, the world needs cheaper oil and cheaper dollars - I think we are very close to entering that environment
you mean cheaper dollar is a tail wind for oil- but we can and we will be in an environment where both fall if there’s enough demand destruction for oil and interest rates start going lower
I hope you get all your fundamentals right and in timely fashion….you must spend a lot of time doing research
So hows your cheaper dollar making your oil high today ? Lol
The oil rally is intact. If demand gets weaker, let’s imagine, then Saudis will squeeze supply a bit more. They are in command position now, and any tales about “increases” in the US oil output will not change the reality.
 Very few countries invest in oil development and anyway this development can be done only by big oil companies, not by countries. Easy oil does not exist anymore on this planet. The developers need in money and expertise. The list of companies capable and looking for new oil development gets shorter every year, mainly by political reasons. This leaves Aramco in the command position.
Edwin, don't try and rationale with him. He has surrendered all senses to his Saudi lords. At 7 million barrels of exports daily, they make up less than 10% of daily demand. The US is easily touch 5 mln a day. This guy really cracks me up.
 Typical ad hominem response.
US should keep outproducing saudis and russia so they do not control the oil market priced so much….pump, pump, pump
Barani, oil production is delayed from the time a well is drilled. In the days of DUCs, especially. I have never seen you mention DUCs before. Research them, and write an article about dwindling DUC inventories since 2020. Add that very important metric to the commercial crude/ SPR overall volumes, along with how few wells are being drilled, and you’ll be telling the whole story. Real oil investors understand these things and their importance on the future of oil prices. Oil isn’t going anywhere but up.
Brilliant
Agree fully. We wont see impact until 12 months out. Its gonna be a supply crunch coming
another repitition of 2014-2016 scenario
250 usd oil by 2026. we're in an inflationary crisis and no amount of new drilling or rate hikes is going to stop it
I believe you got vertical and horizontal mixed up when you were comparing days needed to drill past vs present. The industry is drilling horizontal wells faster today than we could drill vertical wells previously.
so rig counts and inventory reports don't matter any more? you suggest we follow production speculation and assume oil companies break even at $20/b( without avg was $65/b?)
Yes, it's impossible that the break even are in 20´s$/b, if someone know about oil market, the break even before and now (reported in the article) have been always manipulate (you said is 65$/b, I said that is even more). The numbers do not fit, actual production 12.7M, the projections are 13.27M is just 0.57M increase that could take in more than 1 year, and Saudi Arabia could down another 1M just like that! with a demand increasing firm and without any problem, the lacks in the invements in the oil & gas  around the world doesn't estimated here. The facts are that fundamentals in the oil market nowadays are in the side of the Arabian boys
An outdated article….Witness the spike in crude price on coming days
@Sir what Crude Oil Forecast for next few days
I've also got some property in Arizona that the EIA recently certified as 'ocean front'...
the death toll & years of neglegence in Hawaii should worry you more than Daudi oil cuts.Saudi Arabia was there B4 & will be there after the USA evaporates into dust.
Ranjan Kumar Singh
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