US shale groups lock in revenues as output nears Saudi and Russian levels
NEW YORK: US shale producers are locking in prices for their production
as much as three years into the future in a sign that strong domestic
crude pricing is nearing a peak, according to market sources familiar
with money flows.
US crude prices for 2019 and 2020, based on an average of each year’s
monthly contracts, have climbed this week above $68 and $64 a barrel,
respectively, the highest levels in over three years. The rally comes
even as front-month prices have dropped from the three and a half year
highs touched during the summer.
“Hedging activity has picked up considerably over recent weeks and this
will continue to be the case as producers begin to frame budgets for
next year,” said Michael Tran, commodity strategist at RBC Capital
Markets, noting the rally in forward prices are encouraging the producer
bets.
Hedging can reduce risks associated with volatility in oil prices,
acting as an insurance contract to lock in a future selling price and
fix spending plans. Such longer-term bets signal US producers will
continue to expand output, keeping a lid on prices, according to crude
traders and brokers.
The nation’s output this year has climbed above 10 million barrels per
day (bpd), close to top producers Russia and Saudi Arabia. That output
is forecast to grow next year by 840,000 bpd to average 11.5 million
bpd.
There was a large uptick in crude swap activity last week, with just shy
of 8 million barrels changing hands in a day, an energy derivatives
broker said, signaling strong hedging interest. Swaps are a type of
contract that allow producers to lock in or fix the price they receive
for their oil production.
Almost 80 percent of the swap activity was split evenly between
calendars 2020 and 2019, and the remaining 20 percent for this year, the
broker said, adding that there was a small amount of calendar 2021
activity during the week.
The market sources declined to say which oil companies were actively hedging in recent weeks.
The move to hedge at these levels could prove risky for producers in a
market where the price of oil for immediate delivery is higher than for
later deliveries.
Many US shale producers hedged second-quarter production at about $55 a
barrel, which backfired as US crude climbed to more than $70 a barrel
last quarter, the highest level since 2014.
As a result, producers are using more “collars,” a financial instrument
that provides price protection on the downside while allowing them to
share in some of the upside if prices rally.
“We’ve been building a lot of collar structures,” Christian Kendall,
chief executive of Denbury Resources Inc. said last week, noting that
the instruments will protect its production at about $60 a barrel and
provide upside if oil rises to the high $70s per barrel.
Denbury is nearly 50 percent hedged for 2019 and will add hedges to get to 60 percent to 70 percent of production, Kendall said.
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US crude prices for 2019 and 2020, based on an average of each year’s
monthly contracts, have climbed this week above $68 and $64 a barrel,
respectively, the highest levels in over three years. The rally comes
even as front-month prices have dropped from the three and a half year
highs touched during the summer.
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