A number of indicators suggest that the energy slump that started in the latter half of 2014 has bottomed out, and that happy days are here again (at least for now).  Who would have thought back in the good ol’ days three years ago this month—when the spot price for crude oil was north of $100/bbl and the Henry Hub natural gas price averaged $5.15/MMbtu—that Friday’s $54 crude and $2.63 gas would be seen as anything but a catastrophic meltdown. But not so. The fact is that in 2017, producers in a number of basins can make good money at these price levels.  Consequently, drilling activity is coming on strong. Crude oil production is up more than 500 Mb/d since October 2016 to 9 MMb/d, a level not seen in almost a year. And gas output has also been poised to rise, if only real winter demand had kicked in this year. What’s going on? Today we discuss the fact that what we have here, folks, is a rebound unlike any we’ve seen before.

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For the past three years, it’s been a mostly-down rollercoaster, that’s for sure. Pre-price-crash in February 2014, the CME/NYMEX front month price for West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the U.S. crude oil benchmark, at the Cushing, OK hub, averaged $100.68/bbl; 12 months later (February 2015) it was half that ($50.72), and a year after that (February 2016) it was down another 40%, averaging $30.62 for the month (after bottoming out on February 11, 2016 at $26.21/bbl—a price not seen since November 2002.) Same story for Henry Hub gas; as we said, in February 2014 spot prices averaged $5.15/MMbtu, spiking as high as $6.15 mid-month during a Polar Vortex event and falling as low (if low’s the word) as $4.51 later in the month. A year later (February 2015) Henry Hub gas was down to $2.75, and a year after that (February 2016) gas was bargain-priced at $1.93—it bottomed out at $1.64 on March 3, 2016.

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About the song

“Faster Horses (The Cowboy and the Poet)” by country music legend Tom T. Hall topped Billboard’s Hot Country Singles charts and was named one of the 100 Greatest Western Songs of All Time by the Western Writers of America.

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