Windsor Star

Outlook bleak for oilfield services

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

The recent slide in both oil and natural gas prices has hit oilfield services companies particular­ly hard and has turned the forecast bleak for the sector ahead of quarterly results.

Though the oilfield services outlook was rosier just a few weeks ago, multiple investment banks have lowered their earnings projection­s and price targets for drillers, equipment renters and other energy service providers to account for crude’s slide.

BMO Capital Markets analyst Daniel Boyd cut price targets on major U.S. oilfield services companies like Baker Hughes, Halliburto­n Co. and Schlumberg­er Ltd. 18 per cent in a Thursday report amid projection­s that oil prices, depressed since 2014, could be “lower for even longer.”

“The bigger picture impact is that there is not much earnings upside” beyond the end of this year, Boyd said of the reason for the more bearish outlook for the sector.

Similarly, Raymond James analyst Andrew Bradford cut price targets on multiple oilfield services companies — including Precision Drilling Corp., Ensign Energy Services Inc. and Western Energy Services Corp. — over concerns about the renewed drip in crude pricing.

Bradford said he’s lowering forecasts for the second half of 2017 and the first quarter of 2018 “based on the idea that producers probably aren’t generating sufficient cash flow to maintain the pace of spending ” from earlier this year.

Oilfield services companies have been under extreme pressure from their clients, oil and gas producers, to lower their prices as a result of the collapse in crude. In recent months, Bradford said those companies have been able to raise their prices slightly as there has been more demand.

Now that oil prices have tumbled again, activity levels in the oilfield could be pared back.

“People are still hurting,” Canadian Associatio­n of Oilwell Drilling Contractor­s spokespers­on John Bayko said. He said the CAODC revised its drilling forecast up slightly in June, but the forecasted activity is still well below pre-recession levels and a further drop in oil prices could threaten activity levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada