Biweekly U.S. Oil Rig Count Update – 10/21/15
According to Baker Hughes, U.S. oil rig counts continued to fall throughout the first half of October, declining by nine during the week ending Oct 9th and an additional ten during the week ending Oct 16th to a total of 595. Oil rig counts increased to a four month high throughout the final weeks of August but regressed back to a five year low during the week ending Oct 16th. Crude oil production remains higher on a YOY basis but has declined from recent high output levels despite production per rig increasing to a new five and a half year high. The trend of declining crude oil production is expected to continue as drilling productivity estimates show declining production in coming months throughout areas accounting for 95% of recent production gains.
U.S. Oil Rig Counts Declined in Response to Depressed Crude Oil Prices
U.S. Oil Rig Counts Peaked in Late 2014, Prior to the Recent Declines
Oct 16th U.S. Oil Rigs Declined 1.7% From the Previous Week and are Down 62.6% YOY
The Recent Decline in U.S. Oil Rig Counts Since the Nov ’14 Peak has Been Significant
Declines in U.S. Oil Rig Counts Have Decelerated Since February
Declines in Vertical Rigs Remain the Most Significant on a Percentage Basis
Crude Oil Production Has Declined From Recent Peak Output Levels but Remains up 1.8% YOY
Oct 16th Crude Oil Production per Rig Rebounded to a New Five and a Half Year High
Resilient Production Despite a Collapse in Price & Rigs on Same Trajectory as ’08 Natural Gas