Houston-based Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. (NYSE: DO) and 14 affiliates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Houston on April 26.

In court documents, the company listed total assets of more than $5.8 billion, total debts of more than $2.6 billion and between 5,000 and 10,000 creditors.

Diamond noted in the court documents that it was already dealing with a general industry downturn, which was “worsened precipitously in recent months due to two unprecedented global developments, an oil ‘price war’ between OPEC and Russia and the Covid-19 pandemic.” In response, the company “took various actions in an attempt to preserve existing contract backlog, liquidity and financial flexibility,” including borrowing $400 million under its revolving credit facility, before turning to the bankruptcy courts.

Earlier this month, Diamond skipped a semiannual interest payment on its 5.7% senior notes due 2039, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The payment was due April 15, and the company had a 30-day grace period to make the payment before triggering a default.

On April 16, S&P Global Ratings and Moody’s downgraded Diamond.

“Diamond’s decision to not make an interest payment shows that the coronavirus-induced crash in oil prices and corresponding capital spending cuts by oil and gas producers has indefinitely deferred any potential recovery in offshore drilling activity and dayrates,” Pete Speer, Moody’s senior vice president, said in a press release. “Despite having adequate liquidity and no maturities before October 2023, this looks like the first step for the company to begin discussions with creditors.”

In the SEC filing, Diamond said it Lazard Frères & Co. LLC as financial adviser and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP as legal adviser to assist the board and management team in evaluating various alternatives related to the company’s management structure.

Additionally, Diamond laid off 103 people permanently starting on April 15, cutting staff from its corporate office at 15415 Katy Freeway in Houston, according to a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act letter filed with the Texas Workforce Commission that same day. The company said it wasn’t able to give more advance warning of the layoffs because of how rapidly the situation developed.

The layoffs are expected to be complete by April 28.

Job cuts associated with the latest price crisis are likely to come in two waves. The first wave is associated with the cessation of some portion of the industry’s operations and typically involve layoffs among field personnel. The second phase will come later, when companies go bankrupt and much-anticipated consolidation sweeps across the sector. Layoffs in that wave will hit hardest among corporate support staff, engineers and other technical employees — the kinds of people who work in Houston, in other words.

Several other Houston energy companies, including NexTier Oilfield Solutions Inc. (NYSE: NEX), Halliburton Co. (NYSE: HAL) and Baker Hughes Co. (NYSE: BKR), have also conducted layoffs in recent weeks as oil prices plunge lower and the market gets ever tougher.

By Olivia Pulsinelli and Joshua Mann

Courtesy of Houston Business Journal

https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2020/04/26/houston-offshore-driller-files-for-bankruptcy.html

US oil prices crashed into negative territory for the first time in history as the evaporation of demand caused by the coronavirus pandemic has left the world awash with oil and not enough storage capacity — meaning producers are paying buyers to take it off their hands.

West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, lost more than 300 per cent to trade as low as -$40.32 a barrel in a day of chaos in oil markets. The settlement price on Monday was -$37.63, compared to $18.27 on Friday.

Traders capitulated in the face of limited access to storage capacity across the US, including the country’s main delivery point of Cushing, Oklahoma.

The collapse will be a blow to US president Donald Trump, who has gone to great lengths to protect the oil sector, including backing moves by Opec and Russia to cut production and pledging support for the industry.

The shale sector has transformed the US into the world’s largest oil producer in the last decade, giving Mr Trump a foreign policy tool he has brandished as “US Energy Dominance”, but which now faces a rapid decline.

Negative prices are the latest indication of the depth of the crisis hitting the oil sector after lockdowns imposed in many of the world’s major economies have sent crude demand tumbling by as much as a third, leaving the industry facing what Jefferies analyst Jason Gammel called “the bleakest oil macro outlook” he had ever seen.

Not all oil contracts are trading in negative territory. Brent, the international benchmark, lost 8.9 per cent on Monday to fall to $25.57 a barrel, but is less immediately afflicted by storage issues.

WTI contracts for delivery in June lost 14.7 per cent but held above $20 a barrel, though traders warned it could face further losses. Both benchmarks traded above $65 a barrel as recently as January.

Stephen Schork, editor of oil-market newsletter The Schork Report, said he expected access to storage capacity in the US to be exhausted within two weeks — and cautioned that the collapse of the country’s oil consumption was accelerating.

“It just gets uglier from here,” Mr Schork said, adding that sharply rising unemployment numbers meant fewer and fewer Americans would be driving, hurting petrol demand even during its peak summer months.

“This summer is dead on arrival. The biggest demand months are not going to happen,” he said.

Prices for physical grades in many North American regions have fallen into the low single digits reflecting a dearth of buyers able to take delivery of oil, even as prices for later contracts have held up marginally better due to some investors betting on an eventual rebound.

Dealers speculated that traders who had successfully leased storage were putting pressure on rivals without access to tank farms. That could allow them to snap up ultra-cheap oil for their storage tanks, before locking in much higher prices in the futures market, essentially being paid to take oil and then selling it a month later for more than $20.

Traders said contracts for later delivery were being propped up by hopes the worst of the demand destruction could be passed by the summer, if lockdowns and travel bans are eased. But others are questioning whether the record-breaking gaps between cash trades and contracts for later delivery are sustainable.

Crude prices have plummeted this year on the possibility that the coronavirus outbreak will cause a deep global recession. The number of Covid-19 infections worldwide topped 2.4m as of Monday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, with more than 165,000 dead.

The latest developments “painted a grim picture of a world still firmly in the grip of the coronavirus crisis, amplifying worries about sinking oil demand”, said Vandana Hari, founder of Vanda Insights, a Singapore-based energy research firm.

US equities were lower, partly because of the weakness in energy shares such as ExxonMobil and Occidental Petroleum but also because of gathering gloom about the length of time it will take for the country to fully emerge from lockdowns. The S&P 500 closed down 1.8 per cent. The energy sector was off 3.3 per cent.

In fixed income, the yield on the 10-year US Treasury was 0.04 percentage points lower at 0.62 per cent.

Earlier, equity markets in Asia came under pressure. Japan’s benchmark Topix fell 0.7 per cent and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 shed 2.5 per cent, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was flat.

European indices steadied, with the continent-wide Stoxx 600 closing 0.7 per cent higher, while London’s FTSE 100 and Frankfurt’s Dax gained 0.45 per cent.

The deepening fall in oil prices has come despite an Opec-backed deal to cut roughly 10 per cent of global crude supply. Reductions of varying magnitude are planned to run until April 2022 as part of efforts to stabilise prices.

Baker Hughes data on Friday showed that the number of active oil rigs in the US has dropped by more than a third over the past month. But signs of curtailed US supply have done little to boost prices.

“Too much oil, with nowhere to put it,” said Kit Juckes, a senior strategist at Société Générale in London, noting that “oil-sensitive currencies are under pressure again”.

By David Sheppard, Myles McCormick, and Derek Brower in London, and Hudson Lockett in Hong Kong

Courtesy of Houston Business Journal

https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2020/04/20/us-oil-price-below-zero-for-first-time-in-history.html

HOUSTON — Oil-producing nations on Sunday agreed to the largest production cut ever negotiated, in an unprecedented coordinated effort by Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United States to stabilize oil prices and, indirectly, global financial markets.

Saudi Arabia and Russia typically take the lead in setting global production goals. But President Donald Trump, facing a reelection campaign, a plunging economy and American oil companies struggling with collapsing prices, took the unusual step of getting involved after the two countries entered a price war a month ago. Trump had made an agreement a key priority.

It was unclear, however, whether the cuts would be enough to bolster prices. Before the coronavirus crisis, 100 million barrels of oil each day fueled global commerce, but demand is down about 35%. While significant, the cuts agreed to on Sunday still fall far short of what is needed to bring oil production in line with demand.

The plan by OPEC, Russia and other allied producers in a group known as OPEC Plus will slash 9.7 million barrels a day in May and June, or close to 10% of the world’s output.

While the planned cut is slightly smaller than a tentative pact reached last Thursday, the deal should bring some relief to struggling economies in the Middle East and Africa and global oil companies, including American firms that directly and indirectly employ 10 million workers. Analysts expect oil prices, which soared above $100 a barrel only six years ago, to remain below $40 for the foreseeable future. The American oil benchmark price was just over $23 a barrel on Sunday night.

The agreement reached on Sunday was the result of more than a week of telephone conversations involving Trump; the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman; and President Vladimir Putin of Russia. Trump praised the deal, saying on Twitter that it “will save hundreds of thousands of energy jobs in the United States.”

Negotiations hit a snag when Mexico refused to go along with an agreement fashioned by Russia and Saudi Arabia, saying it would cut just 100,000 barrels a day and not 400,000. Saudi Arabia strongly resisted Mexico’s position, worrying that if Mexico could balk others would follow.

Trump supported President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, giving vague promises he would make up the difference, and helped coax the Saudis and Russians not to abandon the tentative agreement.

It was not immediately clear if the Trump administration made a formal commitment to cut production in the United States, but with prices plummeting, many companies in the country have already reduced output. There is no international mechanism to strictly enforce such production agreements and cheating is common.

Big oil nations that are not members of OPEC Plus, like Canada, Brazil and Norway, along with the United States, have been cutting production. The Energy Department has said that American oil production will fall by at least two million barrels a day by the end of the year. Other analysts say the eventual cut could be 3 million barrels a day out of the 13.3 million barrels a day produced at the beginning of the year. Trump has expressed interest in buying oil to fill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to further reduce supplies.

The oil crisis began a month ago when Russia refused to go along with cuts promoted by Saudi Arabia and other OPEC producers. In response, Saudi Arabia said it would increase production by 3 million barrels a day and flood the market. Oil prices and global stock markets fell sharply on the news.

The Russian and Saudi reversal in the last few days was an acknowledgment that their gamble was causing self-inflicted economic wounds.

“There were miscalculations on both sides,” said Ben Cahill, a senior energy fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “The Russians miscalculated how sharp the Saudi response would be and they might have been taken aback by how deep the price drop was.”

The change in course should give a lifeline to American companies as they invest far less in exploration and production.

“Hopefully, the American oil industry has avoided a worst-case scenario,” said Amy Myers Jaffe, an energy and Middle East expert at the Council on Foreign Relations. “There still will be bankruptcies, but for the time being, the fears that there would be a wholesale destruction of the industry can now be put aside, because the worst of the price war has passed.”

It is possible oil prices will sink again in the coming days if traders are not satisfied with the new cuts. In fact, on Thursday, the last day that oil futures traded, the price fell sharply even though a deal was close.

“The agreement provides the expectation of stability,” Rene Ortiz, Ecuador’s energy minister and a former secretary general of OPEC, said in an interview on Sunday. “But whether the markets react accordingly is a different ballgame.”

With the pandemic crushing economies around the world, few buyers were available in recent weeks to buy the cheap Saudi crude. The kingdom stored some oil in Egypt and was forced to let unsold crude sit in tankers along its coasts.

The mounting glut became a threat to Saudi government finances. At a projected average price of $34 a barrel this year, Rystad Energy estimated the kingdom’s revenues would drop by 50% compared with 2019, a loss of $105 billion.

Saudi Arabia still has foreign reserves of $500 billion, but that has shrunk from $740 billion in 2013. Several years of depressed oil prices had already forced the kingdom to borrow money and reduce energy subsidies for citizens. Crown Prince Mohammed is now counting on his reserves to help diversify the Saudi economy for the future.

Russia is in far better shape financially than Saudi Arabia, especially with a flexible exchange rate — as the ruble depreciates, the value of its exports rises. While it would also lose billions of dollars in revenues with the drop in oil prices, the government has a much lower fiscal deficit than Saudi Arabia and has $550 billion in foreign reserves.

But Russia has other liabilities. It has limited processing capacity and its refineries have insufficient storage facilities. European demand has collapsed, and while China is still buying oil, at bargain prices, its storage will be filled up in another month or so, leaving Russian crude stranded.

With thousands of Soviet-era oil and gas wells in western Siberia, Russia would have faced the prospect of shutting down and later turning back on wells that are costly to manage, and in the process might permanently limit the amount of oil recoverable in the future.

Uncertainties abound for the industry as the pandemic disrupts global economies.

Members of OPEC and their allies entered talks last week hoping that the United States, Canada and other Western producers would agree to explicit cuts, adding up to four million or five million barrels a day. Instead, American officials just made assurances that crude output would be reduced over time, on top of voluntary reductions that have already begun at some U.S. companies. The agreement announced on Sunday will taper into a 7.7-million-barrel-a-day cut from July to December and then to 5.8 million barrels a day from January 2021 to April 2022.

American oil companies are already eliminating thousands of jobs, plugging old wells and decommissioning rigs and fracking equipment in preparation for the worst downturn in more than a generation. While American consumers are saving at the gas pump, oil-producing states like Texas, Oklahoma and North Dakota are expecting deep losses in jobs and tax revenue.

Industry executives predict a wave of consolidation, in which small, indebted companies are either bought by larger ones or merge.

“There will be some companies that won’t survive,” said Trent Latshaw, president of Latshaw Drilling, an oil service company active in Texas and Oklahoma. “But the industry in general will survive and come out of this stronger. We will have to make hard decisions, innovate and we’ll become smarter because of this.”

The American industry was last shaken up in 2014, when Saudi Arabia and its OPEC allies flooded the market with oil in an effort to undercut American shale producers who were grabbing market share from them. Prices crashed and hundreds of American companies went out of business, and 170,000 jobs were lost. While American production briefly dropped, it quickly recovered and grew.

The coronavirus is a new and bigger challenge, and it was magnified last month when Russia and Saudi Arabia began their feud. Russian oil executives said they were tired of losing market share to American producers. Saudi Arabia retaliated by promising to pour more oil on the market, taking prices to roughly $20 a barrel for a time, less than half the level at the beginning of the year.

But a complete free fall of oil prices into the single digits — something not seen in two decades — appears to have been avoided. Trump’s recent public lobbying of Russia and Saudi Arabia to lower production helped raise prices several dollars a barrel, allowing many American companies to limit their losses.

Energy experts acknowledged Trump’s role in the deal.

“President Trump, who spent the last three years criticizing OPEC, became the de facto president of the producer group,” said Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

By Clifford Kraus – The New York Times

Courtesy of The Houston Business Journal & The New York Times

https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2020/04/13/oil-nations-prodded-by-trump-reach-deal-to-slash.html

 

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