Oil & Gas Journal -- Permian producers hedge bets against pipeline delays ...................
  Sept. 11, 2018
  WoodMac: Permian producers hedge bets against pipeline delays
  HOUSTON 
  By OGJ editors 
  Due  to concerns that key pipeline projects may fail to start up by their  2019 target dates, Permian producers increased their 2020 oil-basis  hedge positions by 431% in this year’s second quarter, according to Wood  Mackenzie’s latest analysis of oil and gas hedging activity.
  “It  was an anomalously high trading volume for this particular hedging  derivative [2020 Midland-Cushing basis-swaps]. The only reasonable  conclusion one can draw from this surge is that Permian producers are  concerned that key pipeline projects won’t be completed on schedule,”  said Andrew McConn, corporate research analyst at WoodMac.
  With  oil production forecast to rise more than 400,000 b/d year-over-year on  average through 2022, Permian basin oil production is running at a  breakneck speed. This surge in production is overwhelming the basin’s  takeaway capacity and causing oil and gas to sell inside the basin at  steep discounts to national indexes.
  As recently as 2015,  widespread pipeline capacity constraints caused the Midland to Cushing  West Texas Intermediate discount to widen to $20/bbl. This has prompted  many Permian operators to use derivatives to hedge against the risk of  price differentials growing wider.
  While midstream operators are  racing to complete pipeline projects and expansions to help ease  congestion, it could take more than a year before producers in West  Texas see sustained relief. Indeed, current under-construction of final  investment decision projects will not provide sufficient capacity until  late 2019, WoodMac estimates.
  “The more than 52% increase in 2019 Mid-Cush hedge positions suggests that producers perceive risk for that year, as well,” McConn  said. “Specifically, the risk that Midland oil prices don’t gradually  rise and converge back to parity with the Cushing index -- as futures markets currently imply.”
  While  infrastructure might have lost the race with production in 2018, a  massive build-out in late 2019 could flip that script. According to WoodMac’s  latest North American Crude Markets short-term outlook, more than 2  million b/d of capacity is slated to come online beginning in late 2019  and early 2020, which will send the basin into a temporary medium-term  overbuild.
  John Coleman, senior analyst North American crude oil markets at WoodMac,  said, “As new pipelines flood the basin and excess capacity provides a  cheaper route to the US Gulf Coast market, Midland crude prices could  shift from massive discounts to Cushing to slight premium pricing.”
  Coleman  said, “We forecast potential for approximately 1.5 million b/d of  excess pipeline capacity in late 2020. This will have ripple effects on  basin pricing for years to come, with expected downward pressure on  pipeline tariffs showing up in basin differentials well into the early 2020s."
  Copyright © 2018: PennWell Corporation.
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