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Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

Oil’s 76% collapse from almost $108 a barrel in June 2014 was the worst plunge since the financial crisis of 2008.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles
Chris Pugh, a drill hand for Horizontal Well Drillers, uses a power washer as a shale-gas well is drilled in Mannington, West Virginia, U.S. (Photographer: Ty Wright/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

It’s been five years since crude started a precipitous drop that eventually saw it hit a low of $26 a barrel. While prices have recovered some of the lost ground, shale producers are still feeling the pain.

Oil’s 76% collapse from almost $108 a barrel in June 2014 was the worst plunge since the financial crisis of 2008. Below are some data points on how the industry has fared since.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

In 2014, oil and gas companies made up almost 11% of the S&P 500 Index. Now, that’s just over 5% as some investors appear to have given up on the sector.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

Shareholder antipathy stems at least in part from questions over the profitability of shale drilling. While the five big, publicly traded integrated major producers -- BP Plc, Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Total SA -- resumed generating free cash flow as a group in 2017, independent U.S. drillers only became cash-flow-positive (based on an average of 12 such companies compiled by Bloomberg) in 2018 -- and they were back in the red in the first quarter of 2019.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

One fundamental difference is that independents get most, if not all, their crude from shale wells, which go through a much quicker drop-off in production than conventional wells. That compels them to constantly spend on new prospects to keep growing. After oil prices dropped at the end of last year, investors doubled down on their demands for drillers to slash capital budgets.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

It’s not just capital spending, though. Shareholders are now asking independent producers to trim the fat. General and administrative costs, the bulk of which come from salaries, have been creeping up in the last couple of years.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

While the larger players have been able to weather the 2014 crude collapse and another price downturn late last year, some smaller companies weren’t so lucky. The energy sector has made up almost a quarter of all U.S. bankruptcies in the past year.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

Still, one area where U.S. drillers have been unarguably successful in recent years is in expanding production.

Five Years After Crude’s Collapse, Shale Patch Still Struggles

--With assistance from Allison McNeely, Catarina Saraiva, Brandon Kochkodin and Joe Carroll.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rachel Adams-Heard in Houston at radamsheard@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Carlos Caminada

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.