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Oil Update - May 2020

Jun. 01, 2020 6:54 AM ETUSO, UCO, XOP, GUSH, BNO, SCO, USL, DBO, DRIP, NDP, USOI, IEO, OILK, NRGU, OIL, PXE, OILX, USAI, NRGD, NRGO, NRGZ, YGRN1 Comment
Kevin Stecyk profile picture
Kevin Stecyk
5.43K Followers

Summary

  • I expect WTI oil to range between $30-$40 per barrel in June.
  • If it goes below $30, I do not expect it to stay there long.
  • If the oil price surpasses $40, it might stick.

For June, I expect West Texas Intermediate oil price to range between $30 to $40 per barrel. If the oil price goes below $30, I do not expect it to stay there long. Furthermore, I expect the oil price to drift upward over time. So if the oil price surpasses $40, it might stick. I am not overly confident of my forecast, even though it covers a wide range.

The Financial Times article “US shale industry braces for wave of bankruptcies” (subscription required) suggests hard times remain for the shale industry.

Analysts predict 250 companies could go bust before the end of next year unless oil prices rise fast enough to start generating cash for producers wilting under punishing debt loads.

A recent rally has taken the price of West Texas Intermediate, the US marker, back above $30 a barrel, having traded in negative territory last month. But it remains down by half since January — and well beneath average break-even oil prices in the shale patch — leaving many more producers teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.

The Wall Street Journal article “Coronavirus Threatens to Hobble the U.S. Shale-Oil Boom for Years” (subscription required) continues with that same theme.

While oil prices have rebounded in recent days and are above $33 a barrel, U.S. output is still poised to fall because companies aren’t drilling enough wells to make up for production declines from existing wells. Shale wells produce a lot of oil and gas early on, but quickly lose steam. Without investing in new wells, many companies’ output would decline by 30% to 50% in just a year, research firm Wood Mackenzie says.

In a recent Bloomberg article “Global Oil Demand Has Yet to Peak, Energy Watchdog Predicts,” (subscription might be required) IEA’s Faith Birol suggests that new demand from India

This article was written by

Kevin Stecyk profile picture
5.43K Followers
Kevin H. Stecyk has a mechanical engineering degree from the University of Alberta, an MBA from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, and a CFA designation. He spent the earlier part of his career working for Syncrude Canada Limited, an oil sands company in Fort McMurray, Alberta. After Syncrude, he worked for Suncor Energy Inc. in its conventional natural gas division. For the past several years, Kevin has been an independent consultant. Kevin's financial and business articles are not focused on any one area, but rather whatever industry or company currently interests him. Visit his site: Specious Argument (http://www.speciousargument.com/blog/)

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Comments (1)

MAYHAWK profile picture
For the immediate future, I would expect oil to hover around 40 at the high until demand increases and stabilizes.
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