Breath-taking booms and obliterating busts have made the oil and gas business. Booms draw money, which begets more money, which allows for technologies to be invented or perfected, and it builds enthusiasm that turns into blind faith among investors, and they throw more money at it. The money gets drilled into the ground. The debt remains on the balance sheet. Production soars. Demand doesn’t keep up. Storage levels rise. The price begins to plunge. And all heck breaks loose.

The fracking bust didn’t start last summer when the price of oil began to skid. It started in October and has progressed with phenomenal rapidity. In the latest week, according to Baker Hughes, which publishes the data every Friday, drillers idled an additional 33 oil rigs. Only 986 rigs were still active, down 38.7% from October, when they’d peaked at 1,609. In a period of 20 weeks, drillers have cut the number of rigs drilling for oil by 623, the steepest, deepest rig-count nose dive in the data series:

The result should be lower oil production.

But it’s not. That mountain of debt the oil and gas industry has piled up during the fracking boom needs to be serviced even though revenues are crashing as a function of the price of oil. So they cut operating costs and capital expenditures. And they’re concentrating their remaining resources on the most productive plays and the most efficient technologies to maintain some sort of survivable cash flow.

Because they’re all doing it, US production continues to soar, after a mind-bending 84% increase from about 5 million barrels per day in 2008 to over 9.2 million barrels per day in January 2015. This is what a real and ongoing boom looks like:

But demand is not keeping up, and crude oil inventories keep pushing deeper into record levels in the US. Excluding the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, crude oil stocks rose by another 8.4 million barrels to 434.1 million barrels in the latest reporting week, the highest level in the data series going back to 1982, according to the Energy Information Administration. Crude oil inventory levels were 71.7 million barrels, or 20%, higher than at the same time last year. The upward surge in crude oil inventories (blue line) defies the 5-year range (gray area):

Drillers also idled 9 rigs drilling for natural gas, which brought the gas rig count down to 280, the lowest since May 1993, and down 81% from its peak in 2008. Despite the evisceration of drilling activities, production has continued to surge over the years to new records and has turned the US into the largest natural gas producer in the world. This is what the conundrum looks like:

But take the rig-count split between oil and natural gas with a grain of salt. Whether a rig is drilling for oil or gas is a distinction made by the driller. Most fracked wells produce a variety of hydrocarbons, depending on the shale formation. A well might produce a mix of oil, natural gasoline, natural gas, and natural gas liquids like propane or butane. In theory, the driller would classify the rig based on the dominant hydrocarbon.

But in 2011-2012, the price of natural gas was plunging, while the price of oil had soared. So drillers began classifying rigs as “oil rigs” that they’d previously classified as “gas rigs” because it looked a heck of a lot better in their investor presentations. Fracking for oil was making money at those prices; but fracking for gas, at the prices prevailing at the time and still prevailing today, was an exercise in self-bleeding regardless of how drillers tried to twist it.

If investors had known reality, or had wanted to know reality, they might not have forked over that money that has now been drilled into the ground. But drillers on the dreadful fracking treadmill constantly need new money to drill more to make up for the sharp decline rates of the wells they’d just drilled. Hence their efforts at the time to beautify their wells by calling them “oil wells” even if they were getting more gas than oil. Almost nothing in the world of fracking is quite what it appears to be at first blush.

Dropping gasoline prices have perked up American consumers. After years of post-financial-crisis struggles, they finally see some light at the end of the tunnel. But suddenly, it all starts to crumble again. Read… What the Heck Has Suddenly Hit American Consumers?

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