Oil Price Recovery Buys BP And Shell Time On Renewables Transition

 | Dec 31, 2021 09:46

If 2020 was the year the oil and gas industry almost imploded, then 2021 has been the year that has seen an almost Lazarus like comeback, although the big oil companies still face the same problems they had heading into the pandemic.

The collapse in prices that we saw in 2020 may well have been pandemic related, but it certainly wasn’t helped by the price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia that broke out just prior to the lockdowns. This additional factor helped exacerbated the sell-off in prices that saw US futures prices go briefly negative, as well as prompting the collapse in a whole host of US shale businesses, and the cancellation of a number of new pipelines.

In a belated effort to contain the meltdown in prices, as well as protect their own balance sheets OPEC scrambled to support prices by slashing oil production output to as low as 22.5m barrels a day in June 2020, and well below the levels of 32.9m barrels a day that were being pumped out in October 2018, as brent crude prices bottomed at about $15 a barrel during April 2020

Since that day, Russia also saw its output decline in 2020 from a peak of just over 11.3m barrels a day, to a low of just below 9m, before undergoing a steady recovery to levels just above 10m now, according to the EIA.

Having been horribly burned in the early part of 2020 it would appear that neither OPEC or Russia wants to repeat the mistake that saw the oversupply and price collapse that we saw 20 months ago, as refinery and oil storage capacity almost ran out.

With oil prices now back above $80 a barrel they now appear to be compensating for that mistake in the opposite direction, with a reluctance to overly relax their hands on the tiller when it comes to restoring the output that was cut back in response to last year’s sudden demand stop.

Currently OPEC is increasing output by 400k barrels a day on an incremental basis, month on month, with daily output now back close to 30m barrels a day, amidst concerns that they are going too slowly as inventory levels run low.

US crude oil production also underwent a sharp slowdown slipping from 12.8m barrels a day to a low of 9.7m in May 2020. Output is now back at around 11.1m barrels a day according to the EIA.

While the price and demand collapse dented the balance sheets of the oil producing countries it also did immense damage to the balance sheets of the big oil major companies, losing as they did a combined $76bn between them. Around $70bn of that amount was as a result of write-downs and impairments on unviable or stranded assets, however the challenge for the likes of Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM), BP (LON:BP) and Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) remains in how they transition towards a renewable future without hammering their margins.

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Since those dark days in 2020 when we saw the share prices of the big major companies lose over 40% of their market cap, we’ve seen a fairly decent recovery, although most of the same questions remain.

h3 YTD - Oil price relative to share price performance of BP, Shell, and Exxon/h3