U.S. shale companies that are highly leveraged will struggle with the current low oil prices due to the nature of their business model, Edison outlines.

U.S. shale companies that are highly leveraged will struggle with the current low oil prices due to the nature of their business model.

That’s the view that Carlos Gomes, a leading associate analyst on the oil and gas team for Edison, expressed to Rigzone when asked which U.S. oil companies are worst placed to deal with the recent oil price crash.

“As it was observed, companies like Hess Corporation, Occidental Petroleum and Chevron already had severe losses,” Gomes added.

“On the other side of the spectrum, companies that are highly hedged, focused on conventional production, with lower operating costs are more protected to the current low oil price environment,” he continued.

Oil prices tumbled more than 30 percent after the OPEC+ alliance failed to reach an agreement at its latest meeting on March 6. Following the breakdown of the talks, Sandhill Strategy co-founder Katie Bays outlined that OPEC+ is going to war with U.S. shale in a television interview with Bloomberg. According to Bays, the move is something the group has “avoided doing since they cut production in 2016”.

In the wake of the latest price crash, Texas oil bodies TIPRO (Texas Independent Producers & Royalty Owners Association) and TXOGA (Texas Oil & Gas Association) championed the resilience of U.S. oil and gas.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) slashed its oil price forecasts in its latest short-term energy outlook (STEO).

The organization now expects Brent spot prices to average $43.30 per barrel this year, which is down notably from the $61.25 average forecasted in its previous STEO. West Texas Intermediate spot prices are expected to average $38.19 per barrel in 2020. They were previously forecasted to average $55.71 per barrel this year.

Standard Chartered lowered its 2020 average Brent oil price forecast by $29 per barrel to $35 per barrel on Monday.

Edison is an investment research, investor relations and consulting firm, with offices in North America, Europe, the Middle East and AsiaPac.

To contact the author, email andreas.exarheas@rigzone.com