U.S. Oil Rig Count Update – 1/24/18
According to Baker Hughes, U.S. oil rig counts declined slightly during the week ending Jan 19th, finishing at a nine week low. Jan 19th U.S. oil rig counts finished 0.7% below the previous week but remained higher on a YOY basis for the 55th consecutive week, finishing up 35.6%. Jan 19th week ending crude oil production increased to a long-term record high level, contributing to oil production per rig increasing to an eight month high. Crude oil production is expected to strengthen throughout coming months according to drilling productivity estimates compiled 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 Declining Sharply in Early 2015
Jan 19th U.S. Oil Rigs Finished Down 0.7% Week-Over-Week but Remain up 35.6% YOY
The Declines in U.S. Oil Rig Counts Since the Nov ’14 Peak Remain Significant
U.S. Oil Rig Counts Declined Significantly in Early 2015 Prior to Rebounding
Declines in Vertical Rigs Remain the Most Significant on a Percentage Basis
Jan 19th Weekly U.S. Crude Oil Production Increased to the Highest Figure on Record
Jan 19th Crude Oil Production per Rig Increased to an Eight Month High
Resilient Production Despite a Collapse in Price & Rigs on Same Trajectory as ’08 Natural Gas