US shale producers cheered OPEC’s decision to trim output, a move that sent crude prices higher on Friday, closing at levels that oil executives said would keep their profits flowing.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia-led allies agreed to trim output by 1.2 million barrels per day beginning in January. The reduction was larger than the 1 million bpd cut that analysts had expected, Reuters reported.
US oil futures settled up nearly 2% at $52.61 on Friday after trading as much as 4.5% higher during the day. Prices peaked at above $76 in early October but had plummeted to about $50 ahead of this week’s OPEC meeting.
“As long as a little producer like me can expect $50 or better, we can do fine; $50 works for me,” said Harvey Howell, president of H.H. Howell Inc, a San Antonio, Texas, producer.
Halting the steady decline toward $40s a barrel range provides confidence that US companies can profitably expand drilling next year. On Thursday, oil major Chevron Corp set a 2019 capital spending budget that includes a 21% increase in spending on shale.
Without OPEC’s decision to pull back, “we were going to see oil in the $40s,” said Steven Pruett, chief executive of shale producer Elevation Resources LLC. He called the move a “relief” that OPEC and allies were able to agree to the coordinated cuts.
“It is good for us. It keeps the capital flowing,” said George Wommack, CEO of Petro Waste Environmental LP, the largest oil and gas landfill operator in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico. He said service companies “have all been on the edge of our seat watching OPEC.”
Shale investors have been pushing companies to generate higher profits instead of increasing production, and a further drop in oil prices would have slashed cash flow needed to cover production costs and deliver shareholder payouts.
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