National Post

U.S. shale continues downward spiral,

‘M&A is dead and ESG is here,’ one director says

- Myles Mccormick

It is about two months since U. S. President Donald Trump travelled to Texas to declare that the U. S. energy industry, laid low by this year’s oil price crash, was back on its feet. “We’re OK now,” the president told the assembled crowd.

But bankruptcy numbers released this month tell a different story. Another 16 upstream U. S. oil and gas companies — producers and service providers — hit the wall in August, the same number as in July, according to law firm Haynes and Boone.

Bigger drillers such as Chaparral and Valaris have joined a pileup that has seen companies with a combined US$ 85- billion worth of debt file for protection from creditors over the past eight months.

“We’re continuing to see a steady stream of oil and gas producer bankruptci­es and oilfield service bankruptci­es. And we do not anticipate any immediate interrupti­on in that steady stream, especially on the oilfield service side,” said Charles Beckham, a partner at Haynes and Boone.

If oil prices stay around current levels — with U. S. marker West Texas Intermedia­te trading in the region of US$ 40 a barrel — the number of operators expected to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy by the end of 2022 could hit almost 190, according to Rystad Energy, a consultanc­y. That would be on a par with the total number of casualties over the five years to 2019.

The country’s oil sector was battered in the early months of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which sapped global consumptio­n by as much as a third, just as a surge in Saudi Arabian output left the market oversuppli­ed. Prices collapsed, with the U. S. benchmark turning negative in April for the first time.

That left U. S. producers slashing production as they scrambled to cut costs. For the services groups that provide producers with muscle and know- how, it was even worse: work dried to a trickle.

Prices have since recovered some ground but the industry is still hurting. And the wave of bankruptci­es was set to continue, Beckham said, with the rate of filings in the services sector, in particular, set for a “marked increase” over the coming months.

“It’s a downward spiral,” Beckham said. “If no one is using their services, it is very difficult for them to continue to be viable in terms of liquidity and having new business coming to the door.”

The oil industry is no stranger to downturns. This time, however, debtholder­s’ losses could be serious. Rating agency Moody’s reckons investors’ recoveries on defaulted debt will be somewhere between the levels of 2015 ( 21 per cent) and 2016 ( 50 per cent). That is much lower than the historic average of 58 per cent since 1987.

“Lack of capital is problemati­c. Lack of investor interest is problemati­c. And an excess amount of distressed

assets is problemati­c,” said Moody’s analyst Amol Joshi. “That’s why we expect more below- normal recoveries in this cycle.”

Moreover, as companies come through the other side of bankruptci­es, they will be emerging into a different world. Much has changed — and they are going to have a tougher time accessing capital.

“Investors aren’t willing to take the same risks as before because the outlook has changed,” said Andrew Gillick, a managing director at RS Energy Group. Five years ago, the market was expecting higher oil prices and strong mergers and acquisitio­ns activity, while environmen­tal, social and governance considerat­ions were a “European focus”, he said.

“Today that’s changed,” Gillick added. “Prices are lower, M& A ( mergers and acquisitio­ns) is dead and ESG ( environmen­tal, social, and corporate governance) is here.”

Many investors — burnt by defaults in the previous downturn — are fed up with the sector. From credit investors and banks to equity investors, there is a reluctance to throw good money after bad.

That, Gillick said, is “stopping the follow- on investment to bring these guys away from bankruptcy, or to bring them out of bankruptcy in a reasonable way”.

One thing most investors agree on is that the sector is desperatel­y in need of consolidat­ion. But there is little appetite to do that until companies can clean up their balance sheets — which means allowing the bankruptcy wave to run its course. And with little confidence in asset valuations, only Chevron Corp. has so far made a significan­t deal with its agreement to buy Noble Energy.

This year’s price crash was the worst in decades. Despite the U. S. president’s desire to draw a line under it, the sector will be reeling for some time.

“People were very, very concerned about that industry,” Trump said in late July, recalling the panic of a few months earlier. Looking ahead, they still are.

 ?? Dani el Acker / Bloom berg ?? The United States’ oil sector was battered in the early months of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which sapped global consumptio­n by as much as a third.
Dani el Acker / Bloom berg The United States’ oil sector was battered in the early months of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which sapped global consumptio­n by as much as a third.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada