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 Oil Price War May Benefit Both US Shale And 
	Saudi Arabia
 
 By Michael McDonald
 
 Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 
	27, 2015
 ***
 Even as financial commentators on CNBC are starting to
	come around to the idea of a 
	bottom in oil prices, the key question for US oil producers remains one of 
	timing. How long will the oil price slump last? Is this a relatively short 
	term event like 2008, or a
	
	longer term slump like the one in the mid 1980’s? After the oil price 
	crash in 1985, it took almost twenty years for prices to revert to previous 
	levels. If oil does not return to $100 a barrel until 2035, there will be a 
	lot less shale companies around. Some market commentators have cited hedging 
	as a potential source of safety for oil producers, but the truth is that 
	given most firm’s individual levels of hedging and the price of oil today, 
	the hedges are more of a Band-Aid over a gunshot wound than anything else.
 
 The US shale oil industry faces an implacable foe in the current 
	crisis: Saudi Arabia. The long-time king of the oil markets is probably the 
	party
	
	most responsible for the current price decline, and probably the party 
	that is happiest about it. Saudi Arabia is uniquely positioned to withstand 
	low oil prices given that inside sources say
	
	the country has nearly $800B in reserves to weather the storm.
 
 Early on in the fight, shale oil companies were loudly proclaiming
	
	their ability to withstand low prices, but those statements have dimmed 
	in intensity and frequency in recent months. At this point, Saudi Arabia’s 
	currency reserves are roughly equal to the combined market capitalization of 
	the entire US shale oil industry.
 
 The fundamental equation that 
	drives any country or company’s ability to survive in the oil industry is: 
	(Oil Price per Barrel – Cost Per Barrel)*Barrels Produced + Cash Reserves > 
	0.
 
 Essentially if a firm or country has a cost of extraction that is 
	greater than the price per barrel they receive, then they can only produce 
	until their cash reserves run out. Most analysts estimate that cost per 
	barrel for US shale companies
	
	ranges from the mid-fifties to the low nineties. That means, at this 
	stage, almost none of the US shale oil producers are going to be making 
	money producing. These costs have obviously fallen in the last six months as 
	producers look to modify contracts with suppliers and subcontractors and 
	generally push down costs anywhere they can.
 
 Analysts have varying 
	views on the cost of production for Saudi Arabia with some citing total
	
	costs above $80 and others suggesting
	
	costs as little as $5 per barrel. Regardless, it is likely that Saudi 
	Arabia’s costs are lower than that of the US oil producers and their cash 
	resources are certainly greater.
 
 The life raft for US oil producers 
	so far has been its hedging at higher prices.
	
	Bloomberg recently cited $26B in oil price hedges, which certainly helps 
	to buy US oil producers time. Ultimately though, oil is not profitable at 
	today’s levels for US oil producers and this is what has driven the falling 
	rig count in recent weeks.
 
 In the end, who will win the oil price 
	battle, Saudi Arabia or US capitalism and shale producers? Probably both; US 
	oil producers are taking unparalleled steps to lower their costs which will 
	result in much more efficient operations in the end, similar to how US 
	manufacturing came out of the Great Recession at high levels of productivity 
	and ultimately profitability. By the same token, Saudi Arabia is the king of 
	the oil markets for a reason – geologically it is essentially the perfect 
	oil producer. The real losers in this fight are likely to be the other 
	participants who have been trying to stay out of the conflict as much as 
	possible. Other OPEC producing nations and even Russia are not as efficient 
	as Saudi Arabia, nor as dynamic as US shale producers. And ultimately, they 
	are likely to be the ones forced to give ground and cut production.
 
 Source:
	
	http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Oil-Price-War-May-Benefit-Both-US-Shale-And-Saudi-Arabia.html
 
 
 
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