Saudi Arabia announced plans on Sunday to cut shipments by half a million barrels per day in December. And the kingdom threw its weight behind OPEC and its allies reducing supply further next year.
It's a big reversal. Just months ago Saudi Arabia, under pressure from President Donald Trump, was opening up the taps in a bid to prevent $100 oil.
Saudi Arabia's 180 is good news for US shale companies, especially high-debt frackers that are sensitive to price swings. It signals that the world's largest oil exporter won't stand for crude crashing any further.
"If you are a producer in Texas, you have to be happy with the fact that there is a swing supplier in the market that wants to keep prices supported," said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData.
Fears about oversupply sent US oil prices plunging into a bear market last week. Those concerns were driven in part by developments in the United States.
First, US shale companies ramped up production faster than anyone anticipated. US output topped 11 million barrels per day in August for the first time ever.
Second, the Trump administration granted temporary waivers to China, India and other countries to keep buying oil from Iran. The softer-than-expected approach prevented sanctions from knocking too many Iranian barrels offline.
'We need a floor!'
US oil prices declined 10 straight days through Friday, their longest losing streak since 1984.
"We need a floor! It's been quite a month," Dan Eberhart, CEO of oilfield services company Canary LLC, told CNN Business.
Saudi energy minister Khalid Al Falih suggested the kingdom wants to do just that.
"The consensus among all members is that we need to do whatever it takes to balance the market," Al Falih said at a conference in Abu Dhabi Monday. "If that means trimming supply by a million [barrels per day], we will do it."
The odds are "fairly high" that OPEC and its allies will announce next month a production cut of about 1 million barrels per day, according to Helima Croft, global head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital.
US oil prices jumped around 1% on Monday, defying a selloff in the stock market. While the Dow dropped nearly 2%, some oil companies with shale exposure, including Hess (HES) and Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD), outperformed.
"For oil companies, whether shale or anywhere else, obviously the higher the better as far as prices go," said Pavel Molchanov, an energy analyst at Raymond James.
Molchanov cautioned that companies make their investment decisions based on long-term oil price forecasts, not short-term moves.
Frackers took on debt
Still, some small and medium-sized frackers piled on debt to take advantage of opportunities in the Permian Basin and other shale oilfields. That debt makes these companies vulnerable to short-term changes in cash flow caused by swings in prices.
US oil companies sensitive to oil price movements include frackers like Whiting Petroleum (WLL) and Oasis Petroleum as well as California Resources and Kosmos Energy (KOS), according to analysts.
Large independent producers such as EOG Resources (EOG) and Devon Energy (DVN) are also somewhat levered to prices because they only produce the raw commodity.
Oil supermajors, such as ExxonMobil (XOM), Chevron (CVX) and BP (BP), are more insulated to price swings because they are diversified. All three own refining businesses that give them a natural hedge when prices crash.
No price war this time
Saudi Arabia has its own reasons for defending prices. Brent crude needs to fetch around $89 a barrel in order for the kingdom to balance its 2018 budget, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Even after Monday's 1% jump, Brent is trading $18 below that target.
In 2014-2015, Saudi Arabia took a much different approach aimed at easing a supply glut. At the time the kingdom flooded the market with excess oil in a bid to drown out high-cost producers, including shale companies in the United States.
Cheap oil -- crude dropped to $26 a barrel in early 2016 -- caused dozens of oil companies to file for bankruptcy and led to countless layoffs. But shale oil companies emerged from the crash with stronger balance sheets and better technology.
It seems that Saudi Arabia doesn't have a desire to fight that war against US shale again.
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