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OPEC's monumental decision and the fall-out
#1
The Canadian oil-sands frenzy that led to $265 billion of investments in less than a decade won’t immediately stop with $75 crude. Two years from now is another matter. Oil-sands projects are multibillion-dollar investments made upfront to allow many years of output, unlike competing U.S. shale wells that require constant injections of capital. It’s future expansion that’s at risk. “Once you start a project it’s like a freight train: you can’t stop it,” said Laura Lau, a Toronto-based portfolio manager at Brompton Funds. Current oil prices will have producers considering “whether they want to sanction a new one.”

Canadian oil-sands industry’s expansion wavers with $75/bbl crude

Oil at $75/bbl won’t affect U.S. output from shale much because investments in wells and production have already been made, said Andrew Liveris, chairman and CEO of Dow Chemical Co. Some U.S. shale producers are already hurt by the drop in oil prices, though Dow, based in Midland, Michigan, sells enough different products that it can withstand lower crude, Liveris, the head of the largest U.S. chemical maker, said at a conference in Dubai.

Oil at $75/bbl won’t shut in much U.S. shale, Dow’s Liveris says

New York-traded crude oil will probably drop another $30 in the next two years as long-term cycles in commodities and currencies converge, no matter what happens at this week’s OPEC meeting and Iran nuclear talks, according to brokerage United-ICAP.

Oil seen dropping another $30 by ICAP on commodity, dollar cycle

OPEC's contentious decision to keep its production target, leaving the market with a supply glut, could trigger a wave of debt defaults by U.S. shale oil producers, warn analysts.

Will OPEC bankrupt US shale producers?

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#2
Russia will sink into recession at a Urals price of $80 a barrel, seven years after its economy grew 8.5 percent when its chief export oil blend averaged near $70, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts.

Russian Recession Risk at Record as Oil Price Saps Economy - Bloomberg

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#3
Producers including Suncor Energy Inc. (SU) and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. (CNQ), which each fell the most in at least three years yesterday, operate in one of the most expensive places on earth to produce oil. If crude prices continue sinking following OPEC’s decision not to cut global oil supplies, Canada’s producers big and small will have to tighten their belts to prepare for declining profits.

Alberta Producers With World’s Cheapest Oil Face Cascading Woes - Bloomberg

And buying TNK-BP has left Sechin, Rosneft’s chief executive officer and a long-time ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, with a lot of debt to repay. State-controlled Rosneft owes about $60 billion to banks and bondholders, making it more indebted relative to earnings than any large oil producer apart from Brazil’s Petroleo Brasileiro SA.

Russia’s Oil Giant Battles Debt After $55 Billion Deal - Bloomberg

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#4

Interesting chart showing breakeven oil price for every drilling project in the World:

http://www.businessinsider.com/citi-brea...es-2014-11

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#5
Thanks for that, Marsexplorer, very useful!
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#6

'admin' pid='52505' datel Wrote:Thanks for that, Marsexplorer, very useful!

You're most welcome - I'm pleased to be able to make a small contribution in return for the wonderful education I've had from this message board over the last couple of years.

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