Back in February (see post) numerous equity investors refused to believe that any crude oil recovery will be unsustainable. Many viewed it as a buying opportunity – just as they did in 2011 when such “bottom fishing” strategy worked. “Look at the declines in oil rigs” many argued – US crude production is about to dive. Even some in the energy business were convinced that crude oil recovery is coming and we will be back at $70/bbl in no time. It was wishful thinking.
There is no question that North American production of crude oil is stalling. However for now it remains massively elevated relative to last year.
More importantly, many fail to understand just how flexible US crude production has become – the time to bring capacity on/off-line has shrunk dramatically. Furthermore, a great deal of production in the US is now profitable at $60/bbl and even lower as rig efficiency rises. Many view this as unsustainable because new exploration is halted and existing wells are being reused. But there is enough staying power here to continue flooding the markets for some time to come.
The ability to bring capacity back online quickly is the reason we saw US rig count unexpectedly increase last week. This creates a natural near-term cap on crude prices, above which production can rise quickly.
To add to the market's woes, the Iran deal threatens to bring materially more crude into the market in 2016, while immediately releasing a great deal of stored crude the nation currently holds.
Moreover, the Saudis are ramping production to record levels, as OPEC members are now fending for themselves. The Saudis will attempt to recover some of the lost revenue in higher volume.