Barron\'s - 16.03.2020

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30 BARRON’S March 16, 2020


Brent crude, fell 24% on Monday, the


steepest drop since 1991, and then


another 11% over Wednesday and


Thursday. All told, the price for Brent


has been cut in half this year.


This “war” is ostensibly between


Russia and Saudi Arabia. Russia re-


jected a plan from OPEC (the Organi-


zation of the Petroleum Exporting


Countries) to cut production, given the


likelihood of lower global demand.


Saudi Arabia increased its oil output


in retaliation. The real target, however,


has been the U.S., and the dozens of


American companies that have been


drilling feverishly in U.S. shale plays,


stealing market share from the inter-


national giants. The shale drillers de-


pend on capital markets for financing,


and no one will give them loans when


oil prices are below $40. Several will


have to go out of business or be swal-


lowed by competitors.


“It’s really the end of so many com-


panies,” David Heikkinen said on


Monday. “You couldn’t imagine a sup-


ply war in the middle of an economic


recession.” Heikkinen, the CEO of


Houston-based equity research firm


Heikkinen Energy Advisors, said he


was having trouble reaching the oil


companies he usually talks with, be-


cause they were rewriting their drill-


ing plans.


Analysts expect the number of rigs


drilling on U.S. soil to drop by at least


a quarter. Evercore’s James West pre-


dicts the rig count will fall to 690 this


year from an average of 920 in 2019.


U.S. production could decline from a


high of 13 million barrels a day—the


highest level in the world—in Novem-


ber to 12.6 million, on average, in 2020


and 11.1 million in 2021, according to


Stifel.


That could still prove too optimis-


tic. OPEC and its allies are likely to


flood the market with 3.5 million extra


barrels of cheap crude a day, crowding


out competitors. The world uses 100


million barrels a day, give or take a


few million; a shift in demand or sup-


ply of a few hundred thousand barrels


can causes double-digit price swings


in normal times.


And the flood of supply comes just


as the coronavirus pandemic is likely


to destroy demand for several million


barrels of oil a day. Jet travel alone


uses about eight million barrels daily,


and many planes are now grounded


worldwide.


Investors have three options.


One is to ignore the industry en-


tirely. That has been a smart choice for


almost the entire past decade, during


which energy stocks regularly trailed


the market by double-digits. The in-


dustry’s debt position is ominous—oil


and gas producers have piled on more


than $120 billion in the past five years,


and they still can’t consistently pro-


duce cash. In its latest report, the non-


profit Institute for Energy Economics


and Financial Analysis found that


producers had spent $5 billion more


on drilling for oil in the previous four


quarters than they had made from


selling it.


Another option for investors is to


buy energy stocks that could perse-


vere amid low oil prices. Natural gas


producers, for instance, outperformed


last week after months of weakness.


Gas producers should benefit as over-


all oil drilling slows, because that pro-


duces “associated gas” that has led to


oversupply in the gas market. Take


away that associated gas, and the price


should rise.Cabot Oil & Gas(ticker:


COG) is one of the safest gas plays.


Oil shipping companies can also


persevere in this environment, at least


in the short term. Oil is in contango,


meaning that futures prices are trad-


ing above spot prices. It pays for com-


panies to buy oil and hold it on tank-


ers for later sale. “We believe the


entire tanker sector should benefit,”


Stifel analyst Derrick Whitfield wrote.


His favorite of the bunch isInterna-


tional Seaways(INSW), which rose


on the week. Other shipping compa-


nies that could benefit includeScor-


pio Tankers(STNG) andEuronav


(EURN), according to Whitfield.


Refiners, too, would presumably


benefit if oil prices are low for a long


time, because crude is an input for


them. Cowen analyst Jason Gabelman


likesPhillips 66(PSX), which has a


strong balance sheet and can profit by


refining crude produced overseas,


even if U.S. production slumps. Gabel-


man likesValero Energy(VLO), an-


other large U.S. refiner that should see


gains from some of the same dynam-


ics as Phillips.


Still, the refiners’ stocks bounced


around last week, with all the big


American names crashing by double-


digits on Thursday. Low prices may be


good for them, but a global recession


hurts demand for their products.


A third option—the riskiest but


perhaps the most rewarding—is to


bottom-fish for oil producers that


have been beaten down and could


snap back smartly.


One stock that several analysts


have recommended in recent days is


Concho Resources(CXO), a Texas


driller that has hedged most of its pro-


duction this year at higher prices.


Even at $35 a barrel, it is one of the


least leveraged members of the indus-


try and could rebound once prices


recover, analysts say. Trading at $39, it


is miles away from the average ana-


lyst’s target price of $96. Still, Con-


cho—like most other producers—has


rarely generated positive free cash


flow, even at higher oil prices.


And there is no particular reason to


think petroleum will rebound in the


The Oil Shock


Brent Crude
(per barrel)

’12 ’16 ’20

20

40

60

80

100

$120

Source: Bloomberg

F


or more than 150 years,


drilling for oil meant un-


derstanding the science of


geology.


Last week, as oil prices


crashed on simultaneous


supply and demand shocks,


industry experts turned to mythology


(“The pillars of Hercules crashed to-


gether”), and even polemology, the


study of war. “Armageddon,” one ana-


lyst warned.


The international oil benchmark,


By AVI SALZMAN


Struggling


To Survive Oil’s


Global Price War


The energy industry faces a shakeout and difficult times ahead.


Analysts point to seven stocks that could persevere amid low prices.

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