Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on Evaluate Energy. Note: Each quarter represents a rolling four-quarter sum.
Results from second-quarter 2015 financial statements of a number of U.S. companies with onshore oil operations
suggest continued financial strain for some companies. Low oil prices
have significantly reduced cash flow for U.S. oil producers, and to
adjust to lower cash flows, companies have reduced capital expenditures
and raised more cash from debt and equity.
Because of the large
amount of debt accumulated from past years, a higher percentage of
operating cash flow is being devoted to servicing debt. Debt service
payments consist of principal repayment to creditors and typically are
fixed in both amount and frequency, agreed upon before a company
receives a bank loan or issues a bond.
Some companies have been
able to refinance their debt—that is, paying off old debt and taking on
new debt, perhaps with a different interest rate or longer maturity.
This option has increasingly become more expensive, because interest rates
for energy company debt issuance have risen as crude oil prices
declined, and rates are now higher than for any other business sector.
The spread for energy company bond yields with a credit rating below
investment grade averaged 11 percentage points above the risk-free rate
since August, indicating higher interest rates for energy companies.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on Bloomberg, L.P. Note: A
high yield bond means it was issued from a company that is rated below
investment grade by a credit rating agency. An option adjusted spread
measures the difference in yield on the bond index with the risk-free
rate.
With fixed debt repayments and the large
reduction in cash from operations for these companies, the ratio of debt
repayments to operating cash flow has increased recently. For the
previous four quarters from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015, 83% of these
companies' operating cash was being devoted to debt repayments, the
highest since at least 2012. As the share of debt repayment to operating
cash flow increases, a company is left with less cash to use for
investment opportunities, dividends, or savings for future use.
Companies
that use bank credit facilities to meet their short-term cash
requirements face redeterminations twice a year. With next month's round
of redeterminations—which considers the valuation of companies'
reserves as collateral—some companies may face challenges in raising
enough cash to maintain capital expenditures and meet liabilities.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/2273337/debt-service-uses-rising-share-us-onshore-oil-producers-operating-cash-flow
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