Windsor Star

Oil's hired hands expect robust 2022

- DAVID WETHE

Schlumberg­er is the latest oilfield giant to declare the worst is behind them in internatio­nal markets after a historic crude price collapse, forecastin­g strong demand for their services into next year.

The world's biggest oilfield contractor joined rivals Halliburto­n Co. and Baker Hughes Co. this week in predicting expansion in overseas work and a more muted recovery in North America through the rest of 2021. Global oil demand should return to pre-pandemic levels by the end of next year, Schlumberg­er chief executive Olivier Le Peuch said Friday.

“A new growth cycle has finally commenced,” he said in a statement. “There is an increasing­ly positive sentiment in the industry outlook as the recovery strengthen­s despite the lingering concerns regarding the COVID-19 crisis.”

The service sector that helps oil explorers detect and drill undergroun­d reserves is slowly returning to work after a global glut and pandemic-led lockdowns sapped energy demand, triggering job cuts and bankruptci­es across the industry. The big three contractor­s, who this week posted better-than-expected first-quarter results, are pivoting away from the once-booming North American shale patch and chasing work elsewhere instead.

Schlumberg­er said it expects an increase in U.S. onshore activity in the second quarter that will level off during the second half. But internatio­nal activity is poised to continue ramping up through the end of this year and beyond.

Sales are expected to grow by mid-single digits this quarter, while operating margins probably will expand by as much a percentage point, chief financial officer Stephane Biguet said.

The shares, which have climbed more than 50 per cent in the past year, rose 2 per cent to US$25.77 at mid-afternoon in New York.

Le Peuch has cut tens of thousands of workers, reshuffled the company's business around the globe and sold off assets in North America in order to focus on overseas work.

The service provider expects to generate about 80 per cent of sales from internatio­nal markets.

The firm continues to work on a pair of asset sales, including drilling rigs in the Middle East and a business in Canada that shares in the ownership of wells, Le Peuch said.

Meanwhile, Halliburto­n CEO Jeff Miller told investors on Wednesday that early signs of an internatio­nal recovery are already showing up in orders for tools.

“These signs give us greater conviction that the second half of this year will see a low double-digit increase in internatio­nal activity year-on-year,” Miller said. “We believe the internatio­nal markets will experience multiple years of growth.”

 ?? KOSUKE OKAHARA/BLOOMBERG ?? A Schlumberg­er Ltd. worker stands alongside a tanker truck near to the drilling rig at the geothermal energy extraction site operated by Semhach SA in Villejuif, France.
KOSUKE OKAHARA/BLOOMBERG A Schlumberg­er Ltd. worker stands alongside a tanker truck near to the drilling rig at the geothermal energy extraction site operated by Semhach SA in Villejuif, France.

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