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Showing posts with label Petroeum Refinary Products. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Petroeum Refinary Products. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2011

Stable Prospects For Oil And Gas Companies Reflect The Economy And High Oil Prices



Credit quality for the U.S. oil and gas sector is--and should remain--relatively stable for the remainder of 2011 and into 2012, in Standard & Poor's Ratings Services' view. The ongoing gradual improvement in GDP supports oil prices and could aid natural gas, which accounts for 30% of industrial energy demand, though excess supply will continue to set the direction of natural gas prices. Our 2011 and 2012 forecast for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil of $97.67 and $103.59 per barrel bodes well for exploration and production (E&P) companies with a focus on oil and oilfield services and drilling contract companies. Despite $100 oil, consumers have not cut back much on driving, which has benefited refineries' gasoline and diesel throughput and kept their utilization rates high.

We believe robust oil prices are sustainable throughout the remainder of the year and into 2012, which benefit any producer focused on oil and natural gas liquids. Healthy oil prices, favorable price hedges, and lease requirements that require drilling to hold acreage are helping oilfield and contract drilling companies achieve very strong ratios. We expect E&P companies to keep their capital expenditures high through 2012, thus helping oilfield service companies and drillers maintain healthy credit ratios and earnings.

Economic Outlook


Our latest base-case economic forecast still assumes a weak recovery in 2011 and 2012. Our base-case outlook for the oil and gas industry reflects that assumption and the following expectations: 

  • Real GDP remains moderately positive, with the economy growing 2.4% in 2011 and 2.6% in 2012. However, we can expect to shave off several basis points from our 2.4% estimate for 2011 after the disappointing economic news on July 29. U.S. GDP rose at an annualized rate of just 1.3% in the second quarter, after a downwardly revised 0.4% (originally 1.9%) in the first;
  • Oil prices remain at about $100 per barrel, but below levels that would affect how much people drive and therefore, refinery throughput and margins;
  • Oilfield services and drilling activity stays robust;
  • Healthy capacity utilizations and margins continue for most refiners; and
  • Capital market conditions and interest rates remain favorable.

At Standard & Poor's, we publish monthly our economists' scenario of where we think the U.S. economy could be heading. Beyond projecting GDP and inflation, we also include outlooks for other major economic categories. We call this forecast our "baseline scenario," and we use it in all areas of our credit analyses.
However, we realize that financial market participants also want to know how we think the economy could worsen--or improve--from our baseline scenario. Any point-in-time forecast of the economy will be wrong; it is simply a question of how far wrong. As a result, we now project two additional scenarios, one upside and one downside. These scenarios are set approximately at one standard deviation from the base line (roughly the 20th and 80th percentiles of the distribution of possible outcomes). We use the downside case to estimate the credit effect of an economic outlook that is weaker than our expected case.

Industry Credit Outlook


E&P producers reap the benefits of high oil prices

Several factors continue to support lofty crude prices: steady growth in the global economy, the loss of approximately 1.6 million barrels per day (1.8% of total daily consumption) of Libyan production, political turmoil in other North African countries and the Middle East, temporary North Sea production outages of approximately 400,000 barrels per day, and uncertainties surrounding Saudi Arabia's ability to ramp up additional capacity. Yet supply-demand fundamentals alone don't explain oil prices. The rise has mirrored the declining value of the U.S. dollar, which we expect to remain weak. High prices have benefited E&P producers' cash flows and, as a result, the companies have sought to acquire acreage in the oil and natural gas liquid rich fields, such as the Eagle Ford Shale and Granite Wash.

In sharp contrast, natural gas prices are still weak. Over the past couple of years, the number of natural gas rigs has largely exhibited inelastic behavior to declining prices, and a balancing of supply and demand remains elusive. Production economics and cash costs have taken a back seat to the ongoing need to drill to satisfy held by production (HBP) leases, joint venture agreements, and because of favorable producer hedges. Moreover, a significant backlog of drilled, but not yet completed, wells will continue to put downward pressure on gas prices.

We believe only a decline in supply could trigger an improvement in natural gas prices. Specifically, natural gas prices could increase when:

  • Existing favorable price hedges roll off;
  • Forward strip prices remain consistently below $5 per million cubic feet, which we believe to be an uneconomic threshold for a meaningful amount of production;
  • Drilling declines meaningfully, possibly sometime in the latter half of 2012, due in part to a reduction in drilling to maintain lease acreage (HBP), particularly in the Haynesville shale; and
  • A meaningful number of the drilled, but uncompleted, natural gas wells are completed.

Barring a recession, the confluence of these factors could reestablish the relationship between gas prices and rig count and ultimately lead to a reduction in natural gas inventories, thus increasing prices.

Demand for oilfield services and contract drilling is robust

Higher oil prices also benefit service providers that support oil drilling and production. Moreover, based on preliminary data, E&P capital budgets should be moderately up in 2012, continuing healthy demand for oilfield equipment and services. Land-based drillers, in particular, are benefiting as the drilling boom in liquids-rich shale plays offsets what we believe will be a slow but steady decline in natural gas drilling. With natural gas trading at record discounts relative to oil, we expect drillers to continue shifting to oil or liquids-based drilling (natural gas currently represents approximately 45% of the total rig count).

Offshore drillers face mixed prospects, with nascent signs of increasing demand offset by the specter of newbuild rig deliveries. Although the pace and prospects for tenders remains materially better than in 2010, the impact of scheduled additions to offshore fleets over the next several quarters is a risk in our view. Based on scheduled deliveries, we expect that global jackup and floating rig fleets will increase by approximately 7% and 13%, respectively, by the end of 2012. While we believe the recent trends of increasing dayrates and utilization for jackup rigs will continue over the next couple of years, given E&P companies' spending projections and the moderate nature of planned fleet additions, mid to deepwater floating rigs will likely face greater challenges because of the number of new deliveries coming on line. We expect to see further bifurcation between the segments with newer, higher-specification floating units achieving strong utilization levels and older, lower specification units facing lower utilization and potential declines in dayrates. Permitting activity in the Gulf of Mexico remains slow since the Macondo disaster, and will likely continue slow into 2012. The timing of a sustained recovery in drilling in the Gulf is still uncertain.

Refining and marketing margins should remain solid

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Indian core Industry data Stagnates in June 2011

   pibimage3-Gold-Oil-Barrels
Ministry of Commerce & Industry29-July, 2011 18:02 IST
Index of Eight Core Industries (Base: 2004-05=100) June 2011
The Index of Eight core industries having a combined weight of 37.90 per cent in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) with base 2004-05 stood at 138.98 in June 2011 and registered a growth of 5.2% compared to 4.4% registered in June 2010. During April-June 2011-12, eight core industries registered a growth of 5.0% as against 6.8% during the corresponding period of the previous year 2010-11.
Coal
Coal production (weight of 4.38% in the IIP) registered a growth of (-) 3.3% in June2011 compared to growth of 0.8% in June2010. Coal production grew by 0.2% during April-June 2011-12 compared to an increase of (-) 0.6 during the same period of 2010-11.
Crude Oil
Crude Oil production (weight of 5.22% in the IIP) registered a growth of 7.7 % in June2011 compared to a growth of 6.8% in June2010. The Crude Oil production registered a growth of 9.5% during April-June 2011-12 compared to 5.9% during the same period of 2010-11.
Natural Gas
Natural Gas production (weight of 1.71% in the IIP) registered a growth of (-) 11.7% inJune 2011 compared to growth of 25.4% inJune 2010. The Natural Gas production registered a growth of (-) 10.2% during April-June 2011-12 compared to 37.0% during the same period of 2010-11.
Petroleum Refinery Products
Petroleum refinery production (weight of 5.94% in the IIP) registered a growth of 4.7% in June 2011 compared to growth of 2.9% inJune 2010. The Petroleum refinery production registered a growth of 5.3% during April-June 2011-12 compared to 5.3% during the same period of 2010-11.
Fertilizers
Fertilizer production (weight of 1.25% in the IIP) registered a growth of (-) 2.4% inJune 2011 compared to (-) 6.7% in June2010.Fertilizer production grew by 1.1%during April-June 2011-12 compared to an increase of (-) 2.6% during the same period of 2010-11.
Steel
Steel production (weight of 6.68% in the IIP) registered a growth of 12.5% in June2011 compared to 4.3% in June 2010. Steel production grew by 7.8% during April-June2011-12 compared to an increase of 8.6% during the same period of 2010-11.
Cement
Cement production (weight of 2.41% in the IIP) registered a growth of (-) 0.8% in June2011 compared to 3.7% in June 2010. Cement Production grew by (-) 0.9% during April-June 2011-12 compared to an increase of 7.0% during the same period of 2010-11.
Electricity
Electricity generation (weight of 10.32% in the IIP) registered a growth of 8.2% in June2011 compared to a growth of 3.8% in June2010. Electricity generation grew by 8.3% during April-June 2011-12 compared to 5.7% during the same period of 2010-11.
N.B: Data are provisional. Revision has been made based on revised data obtained.