Oil and Gas Investor 2022 Outlook: The Great Price Hike

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Oil and Gas Investor
Oil and Gas Investor

Inflation, that strange phenomena in which too much money results in too few things, has spread into grocery stores, clothing shops and especially energy commodities.

Each area has taken a different path to higher prices, but oil and natural gas prices have surged beyond all other areas in the past 12 months, according to the U.S. Department of Labor Statistics.

Oil and Gas Investor January 2022 Cover Story - The Great Price Hike - James Wicklund Stephens Inc Headshot
The normal correlation between rig counts, frac spread, or completions and oil prices has “broken down,” said James K. Wicklund, managing director at Stephens Inc.

WTI prices have made a starling recovery since April 2020, when prices averaged $16.55/ bbl. In November 2021, WTI spot prices averaged $79.15, nearly five times higher.

Some politicians have labeled this price gouging, despite rising production that’s been unable to keep pace with recovering demand as the planet reopens from the pandemic.

Yet oil and gas companies themselves are fretting over rising prices as they enter 2022. As the industry settles into a recovery based largely on self-restraint, E&Ps are girding themselves against sizable cost increases from pressure pumpers, drillers and other service providers.

The inflation faced by the broader economy pales in comparison. The International Monetary Fund predicts that U.S. inflation will find its trough at about 2% by mid-2022 after peaking at the end of last year.

Oil and gas companies? They’re bracing for price hikes of up to 15% this year.

And while inflation may not inflict a mortal wound to E&P cash flows, there are clear indications it will take a bite out of the returns that industry leaders want as their gold standard.

E&Ps are already looking to squeeze more efficiency out of their operations this year as they brace for double-digit growth in service costs.

For oilfield service companies, the test of their pricing powers is the continued hyper-sensitivity of the commodity market. After Brent crude oil spot prices averaged $81 in November, prices tumbled on news of the pandemic’s most recent variant, Omicron, in much the same way prices stuttered because of the Delta variant.

Oil and Gas Investor January 2022 Cover Story - The Great Price Hike - Oilfield Services Revenue Growth Graph
After nine consecutive quarters of revenue losses, service companies finally saw a modest increase in revenue in 2021, and analysts expect revenue to grow further this year.

“Oil and gas activity and upstream spending in U.S. land has been exposed to significant volatility in the last two years,” said Artem Abramov, head of shale research at Rystad Energy.

Underlying the rising costs is a diffuse, but clear tension between public E&Ps that have shown relentless discipline and spendthrift private companies that tore through inventory in 2021. Rystad Energy sees public company’s accelerating activity in 2021.

While private operators’ aggressiveness in the oil patch drove spending in 2021, “we anticipate significant growth in 2022 from public and private operators alike,” said Abramov.