The simplistic thought is that the oil companies need to maximize their cost to selling price ratio. If it costs you 50 dollars a barrel to produce and your selling it for 55 dollars yes you are showing a profit, but your return on the dollar is low. There has to be capital returned to pay for initial investments as well as new developments. If your not making enough money to fund both then you will soon be out of business.The way I understand this is before at $100 a barrel demand was to low because of the cost. Now that it's lower demand is way up and selling way more. So sure the price is lower but your selling more. Seems like it's working. Please correct me if I'm missing something. I'm no expert.
Geeessss stompin sounds like the oil patch is fallowing the forest sectors way of doing business. How wounderfull would it be if we could get paid enough to cover capital investment and have some left over for new developments...The simplistic thought is that the oil companies need to maximize their cost to selling price ratio. If it costs you 50 dollars a barrel to produce and your selling it for 55 dollars yes you are showing a profit, but your return on the dollar is low. There has to be capital returned to pay for initial investments as well as new developments. If your not making enough money to fund both then you will soon be out of business.
Part of this is a simple cleansing. Costs have gotten to high in the patch, the companies need to reel those costs. A simple downturn gives them an excuse to make cuts, put some pressure on the small guy, bankrupt a few, pretty soon guys are willing to work for less and the costs go down.
It's all politics, I would say Obama is to blame for flooding the market with oil if you look at the top producer it's red white and blue. Now that the states can keep the flow up at a cheaper price for production it's a new ball game and OPEC doesn't like it or as they say keep there market share.
The simplistic thought is that the oil companies need to maximize their cost to selling price ratio. If it costs you 50 dollars a barrel to produce and your selling it for 55 dollars yes you are showing a profit, but your return on the dollar is low. There has to be capital returned to pay for initial investments as well as new developments. If your not making enough money to fund both then you will soon be out of business.
Part of this is a simple cleansing. Costs have gotten to high in the patch, the companies need to reel those costs. A simple downturn gives them an excuse to make cuts, put some pressure on the small guy, bankrupt a few, pretty soon guys are willing to work for less and the costs go down.
i agree. This has nothing to do with cleansing. That happened in 2008.I agree with the first part but not the second. Top dollar in my field hasn't gone up in over 15 years. Operating costs with the introduction for example of higher safety standards and more required training has caused operators and contractors across the board to raise prices. If we still operated across the board like they did in late '80's and '90's then I would agree but nobody does anymore-except for maybe parts of the US and definitely other countries.
It's unfortunate so many of us half to pay, I'm currently unemployed for the first time since graduating high school some 20 odd years ago. It seems it's always the states stirring the pot in this world and it would be bad for everyone but I hope the rest of the world is successful in getting rid of the U.S debt and they crumble like the turds they are, American pigs.
X2! Way too hard to make return up here in Alberta for an oil company!World oil consumption has been flat at about 91Mm bbls/day for a while. World oil production at 93 Mm bbls/day (2Mm/day over supply). North American consumption is down while China and India are up. Mid East production flat at about 30Mm bbls/day. What has changed is that NA production has really increased and is now about 30Mm Bbbls/day.
The big difference is the cost of production. NA around $55/bbl and the Mid East at $10/bbl. But the Mid East, Russia, Libya, etc build their budgets around $100 oil. Everyone is affected. Saudi's sitting on $750 billion in reserve cash and NA not too much cash floating around.
To maintain the 30% market share, the Saudi's are keeping the Mid East production whole at 30Mm bbls/day by increasing their production to about 10Mm bbls/day. As the oversupply continues (NA production still rising) the price will continue to stay around $50-60/bbl.
With prices at current levels, capital investment (drilling) has stopped. Production will eventually slow down then drop off. Prices will recover and companies will eventually be able to put together capital programs. All of this will take at least 12 more months. The best thing for low oil prices are low oil prices.
Because nothing is simple. Costs in AB and BC are significantly higher than in the Southern States. Access to land (to drill), complex regulatory requirements, very limited take away capacity (pipelines and processing) all make operations in AB and BC challenging in comparison. Capital has left and will continue to leave Canada with most of the majors investing more and more of their capital down south.
I agree with the first part but not the second. Top dollar in my field hasn't gone up in over 15 years. Operating costs with the introduction for example of higher safety standards and more required training has caused operators and contractors across the board to raise prices. If we still operated across the board like they did in late '80's and '90's then I would agree but nobody does anymore-except for maybe parts of the US and definitely other countries.
No. I work in drilling.
And considering a diesel truck 15 years ago was over 20g cheaper you are 100% right.