Kuwait Times

Opportunit­y lurks as energy shares plunge

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NEW YORK: Shale stocks have been hard-hit as investors see margins all but evaporatin­g following the slide in crude oil prices, but the US shale energy boom is not over. An index of oil and gas exploratio­n and production tumbled 8.15 percent on Friday as US crude fell almost 10 percent to around $66.36 per barrel to hit its lowest in 4-1/2 years. The slide came the day after oil cartel OPEC decided not to cut output in a meeting in Vienna. Prior to the decision, Saudi officials were reported as saying the kingdom, with its large currency reserves, was prepared to withstand oil prices as low as $70-$80 per barrel for up to a year.

But the weaker shale players may not have that long. “We do not know if OPEC has ulterior motives to let oil prices drift lower and pinch the global (exploratio­n and production) sector, or if reaching a consensus on cuts was just too challengin­g,” wrote Wells Fargo Securities in a Friday client note. “What is clear is that lower cash flows are highly likely to translate into lower E&P spending.”

US crude prices were catching up to Thursday’s action in Brent as markets across the United States were closed for the is,” said Tony Roth, chief investment officer at Wilmington Trust in Wilmington, Delaware.

“Crude seems to have no floor right now, and we could easily see the price drop into the low $60s.” With the big stock price drops, others see a run to consolidat­ion. The sector subindex is down 12 percent in 2014, with year-to-date losses of more than 20 percent in seven companies.

“I think we’ll see some healthy consolidat­ion take place,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.

“Some may wither on the vine, but technology has improved to make it profitable to extract at a lower price point than last year. As a result, we’ll probably see some opportunis­tic buying.”

Jacobsen and Krosby said the slide in oil prices and the sector’s shares does not mean the boom in the energy sector in the United States is ending, but will likely enter a new stage of developmen­t.

“The renaissanc­e isn’t over,” said Jacobsen. “It’s just maturing.” — Reuters

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