Thread regarding Halliburton Co. layoffs

Oil, gas industry sheds more than 6,000 jobs in a single day

Oil and gas companies announced plans to cut more than 6,400 jobs on a grim day for the industry that saw the price of crude oil settle below $20 for the first time since 2001 and the amount of petroleum in U.S. storage rise by nearly 20 million barrels.

The most job losses came at Weatherford International, the Houston-based oil-field service company, which said Wednesday that it plans to cut 25 percent of its global workforce.

A breakdown of where the layoffs will take place was not immediately available but the company had said it employed about 24,000 workers at the beginning of the year — meaning it will shed 6,000 jobs.

But as demand collapses during coronavirus-related shutdown orders and the recent global price war sent stockpiles soaring, Weatherford isn’t alone.

Houston oil-field service companies Baker Hughes and Halliburton also said they were laying off almost a combined 400 employees at three locations in Oklahoma and Colorado this week.

Reid Morrison, U.S. Energy Advisory Services Leader at the Houston office of the international consulting firm PwC, said the pandemic came at a moment of vulnerability for the industry.

Crude oil in the U.S. spent almost a year near $55 per barrel, the price needed by many U.S. shale drillers to break even. Then a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia sent the price tumbling below $30 in March.

With the industry still unable to resolve the global supply glut, West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed trading at $19.87 per barrel Wednesday.

COVID-19 and oil price volatility have amped up the pressure facing the oil and gas industry, and there will be a time and place to reflect on lessons learned,” Morrison said.

For the immediate future and next 12 to 18 months, it is time for the industry to replace hoping for higher prices with resetting their strategies and cost structures based on the low cycle, which means shrinking.”

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Post ID: @OP+14v6xHoZ

6 replies (most recent on top)

Those numbers are inaccurately low

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Post ID: @2nwd+14v6xHoZ

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/article/Oil-gas-industry-sheds-more-than-6-000-jobs-in-15203587.php

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Post ID: @1xmf+14v6xHoZ

Schlumberger posts $7.4 billion loss on record low oil prices related to coronavirus pandemic

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Post ID: @1ogm+14v6xHoZ

Oil’s Collapse Is Taking an Entire Service Industry Down With It. No one is feeling the pain of an oil collapse more than the shale producers. Except, perhaps, their suppliers.

Take Stacy Locke, chief executive officer for Pioneer Energy Services Corp. Locke says he had no choice but to abandon drilling in the Bakken shale basin after roughly 20 years there as plunging oil prices slashed activity, and a major customer in the region – Whiting Petroleum Corp. – went bankrupt.

The end result of a tough year for oil: Pioneer will lose the last 6 rigs it has in the Bakken, with each one ending jobs for 20 or so workers.

Since the start of 2019, the oilfield services sector has lost almost 50,000 jobs, or about 13% of its workforce.

Meanwhile, the falloff in fracking – the technology used to shake loose oil from shale – is forecast to face its worst year ever with at least half of all work expected to be ended by July 1, according to Citigroup Inc. The domino effect for workers across a wide spectrum of companies can be devastating, said Skip Locken, Pioneer’s vice president of drilling operations.

“There are so many different companies that are involved in drilling one well,” said Locken, a North Dakota native who’s worked with Whiting as a client for a dozen years. “It comes down to the person that brings water out to employees on the rig, or toilet paper, paper towels, oil, gas, cement, or who do the fracking and the logging.”

Contractors hired to map underground pockets of oil, drill new wells and open them are expected to be among the hardest hit in the energy industry as producers slam on the brakes to survive a crude-price crash triggered by a demand-destroying pandemic and a battle for market share between Saudi Arabia and Russia. Although the world’s biggest producers agreed to a global output cut last weekend, it hasn’t been enough to boost prices from the doldrums.

“It’s just terribly painful,” said Locke, whose own company filed for chapter 11 restructuring in March, about a month before Whiting’s move. “When the big ones fall, that’s really pretty catastrophic.”

Whiting’s bankruptcy filing alone has undercut rig operators, water haulers, chemical providers and other contractors large and small.

Four of the world’s biggest servicers are each owed more than $1 million, with Schlumberger Ltd. and Halliburton Co. carrying unsecured claims of more than $8 million a piece.

Investors will get their first look at the first-quarter financial damage on Friday when Schlumberger, the world’s biggest oil services provider, reports earnings. Halliburton and Baker Hughes Co. will follow next week.

On Monday, Baker Hughes announced it will write down $15 billion in value from two of its biggest business units. That followed announcements over the past month from rivals Schlumberger and Halliburton of furloughs, salary reductions and job cuts.

After averaging less than three bankruptcies a quarter for all of 2018 and the first half of 2019, the oilfield services sector finally hit its debt wall, according to Haynes & Boone LLP. Now the hired hands of the oil patch are averaging more than eight filings over each of the past three quarters.

“I think we’re going to have quite a few bankruptcies this go around,” Locke said by telephone. “Our experience in the Bakken, after 15-20 years up there is probably over for drilling, which is really really sad.”

To combat that, some explorers such as Parsley Energy Inc. have have asked their contractors to help them cut as much as 25% from their oilfield costs. But industry consultant Rystad Energy estimates that explorers may only be able to get about half that, with so little for the servicers to give up this time around.

The last time that oil prices tanked, from more than $100 a barrel in 2014 to roughly $26 in 2016, service companies gave up major concessions to their customers, partly to keep market share.

Now companies such as Patterson-UTI Energy Inc. and RPC Inc. are working from a new playbook: sc-apping excess frack pumps for the first time ever, turning instead to idle gear in a pinch.

“When a pump breaks, I drag the truck off to the side and I go grab another one that was working last time I had it on a job, put it in line and run that till it breaks,” Richard Spears, an industry consultant who’s worked in and around the oil patch for decades, said on a recent Evercore ISI webinar.

“You can do this incredible discounting as long as you’ve got idle equipment that was in good shape,” he said. “But eventually you burn through eve

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Post ID: @upi+14v6xHoZ

OPEC on Thursday cut its forecast for 2020 oil demand by 6.9 million barrels a day as the COVID-19 pandemic smashes appetite for crude. OPEC now sees 2020 demand falling by 6.8 million barrels a day.

That reflects a contraction in demand of 12 million barrels a day in the current quarter, with April bearing the brunt with a 20 million barrel a day fall.

"Considering latest developments, and the large uncertainties going forward, downward risks remain significant, suggesting possibility of further adjustments, especially in the 2Q, should new data and further developments warrant revisions," OPEC said.

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Post ID: @nsj+14v6xHoZ

Oil plunged to the lowest in two decades amid a record collapse in U.S. fuel demand and the biggest ever weekly build in domestic crude supplies.

Futures in New York settled below $20 a barrel for first time since 2002. American gasoline consumption dropped to the lowest level on record while crude supplies ballooned by 19.2 million barrels, according the Energy Information Administration.

The government report underscored an earlier forecast by the Paris-based International Energy Administration, which warned that even OPEC+’s historic production cut can’t counter the epic demand decline caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

While Saudi Arabia and other Middle East producers have pledged to cut supply starting next month, they continue to flood the market in April. Meanwhile, U.S. oil production has declined only marginally.

“Whatever production that we are cutting back is not going to offset the demand destruction,” said Stephen Schork, president of the energy consultancy Schork Group Inc.

The oil glut is looking so severe that the Trump administration is considering paying U.S. oil producers to leave crude in the ground.

Oil demand will drop by over 9 million barrels a day this year, wiping out a decade of consumption growth, the IEA said, exhausting storage by mid-year.

Consumption in April is expected to fall by almost a third to the lowest level since 1995, making this year the worst in the history of the oil market. Despite OPEC+’s efforts, global inventories will accumulate by 12 million barrels a day in the first half of the year and “overwhelm the logistics of the oil industry” in the coming weeks, the Paris-based agency warned.

Stockpiles in the U.S. increased for a 12th straight week while European inventories rose the most in more than a year last week. This is weakening key physical market gauges. Swap prices indicate North Sea cargoes are at their biggest discounts to Brent futures in more than a decade.

“At some point, the market will have to start looking forward,” Daniel Ghali, a TD Securities commodity strategist, said by phone. “The OPEC cuts are going to be implemented and also U.S producers will have to reduce their output. Our expectation is we will start to see the market tightening as early as June.”

In talks with OPEC+, the U.S., Canada and Brazil estimated their production will drop by a combined 3.7 million barrels a day.

Last week’s decline “should help alleviate any concerns from OPEC+ that the U.S. isn’t doing its part,” Brian Kessens, portfolio manager at Tortoise, said by phone.

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Post ID: @qoj+14v6xHoZ

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