Thirty years ago, there were a lot of oil fields in the US which had ceased production because the output was too low to be profitable. There was still oil in the ground, but no practical way to extract it, because it wasn't in pockets between the rock layers. It was soaked into the rock and no way to pump it, or force it up the pipe.
New extraction technologies were developed and suddenly the US was once again a major oil producer. There was much rejoicing.
Everything comes with a catch. This time, it was the money. New extraction technologies are expensive, so the oil they produce is expensive too. It's even more expensive when it was produced with borrowed money.
The Shale Industry Could Be Swallowed By Its Own Debt
This puts our oil companies in the strange position of losing more money when sales increase.
When the sub-prime home mortgage market collapsed, the banks didn't seem to be worried about the prospect of owning thousands of houses that were worth less than the mortgage. I wonder how they'll feel about owning thousands of oil wells.
New extraction technologies were developed and suddenly the US was once again a major oil producer. There was much rejoicing.
Everything comes with a catch. This time, it was the money. New extraction technologies are expensive, so the oil they produce is expensive too. It's even more expensive when it was produced with borrowed money.
The Shale Industry Could Be Swallowed By Its Own Debt
The problem for shale drillers is that they’ve consistently spent money faster than they’ve made it, even when oil was $100 a barrel. The companies in the Bloomberg index spent $4.15 for every dollar earned selling oil and gas in the first quarter, up from $2.25 a year earlier, while pushing U.S. oil production to the highest in more than 30 years.
This puts our oil companies in the strange position of losing more money when sales increase.
When the sub-prime home mortgage market collapsed, the banks didn't seem to be worried about the prospect of owning thousands of houses that were worth less than the mortgage. I wonder how they'll feel about owning thousands of oil wells.