U.S. Oil Drillers Prioritize Short-Term Wins For Long-Term Loss

 | May 12, 2020 06:49AM ET

It’s certainly not the swinging days of the “Drill baby, drill!” phenomenon. Yet, U.S. crude production is creeping up—rising slowly but surely with the price rebound of the past two weeks. 

And that’s the worst possible thing that could happen for the long-term health of the shale industry. 

Prolonged and severe price crashes aren’t new to oil. But never before have they involved a double-whammy of simultaneous supply and demand shocks that have brutalized the market to the extent we’ve seen. 

The pandemic-forced lockdowns of the past two months have not only erased nearly a decade’s worth of oil demand. They’ve upended markets in disparate ways, with regional dislocations and uneven demand destruction across products paving the way for a messy, disjointed recovery, New York-based Energy Intelligence observed in a blog issued last week.

h2 Day By Day Responses Needed/h2

Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDSa) CEO Ben van Beurden has also noted that the present dynamics in oil involve “a level of uncertainty that you cannot model with scenarios” and supply and trading responses need to be taken “day by day.” 

Therein comes the debate about the price recovery we’re in. Barring Monday’s relatively modest decline of under 2.5%, U.S. crude’s U.S. West Texas Intermediate benchmark has seen phenomenal gains lately: 25% last week; 17% the previous week; and a total of 100% from the lows of 11 days ago. And production is rising as a result.