Energy Funds Reveal Pain For U.S. Drillers As OPEC Meets

 | Dec 07, 2018 00:10

The curse of shale is its gift of cheap oil to the world, so much that few remember the spectacular blow-up of US drillers during the crude price crash of two years ago.

Hedge funds, of course, can short sell shale stocks to profit in bad times. Still, this is not a crowded trade as many energy funds seem to have faith in the longevity of the industry and its ability to survive at low prices. How did these funds perform this year?

“Not very good” can be a fitting description for a broad section of the shale-believing fund universe, and “terrible” will be apt to describe some performances in particular. Two funds that capture this range are UK-based Westbeck Energy Opportunity Fund, which is down 7 percent for the year through October, and New York-based Equinox Energy Fund, which has lost 65 percent on the year, according to returns data shared privately by the funds with their investors and seen by Investing.com.

The performances are an important study amid Thursday's meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which is again facing an oversupply crisis partly due to the US shale drillers and the notion that they can survive any low in crude prices.

h3 Shale Production Fears Overblown/h3

The Westbeck fund, led by former Goldman Sachs money manager and Lehman Brothers oil trader Jean-Louis Le Mee, detailed the many misconceptions about the seeming invincibility of US oil drillers in a near 30-page letter to its investors in October, with bullet-points that included: “Shale runaway production growth fears are overblown.”

The fund’s remarks came as leading shale drillers said plunging oil prices could force them to pull back on production, after a flood of crude unleashed this year. Harold Hamm, chief executive of Continental Resources, which helped pioneer horizontal drilling and fracking in the Bakken Shale region 15 years ago, told The Wall Street Journal in a recent interview that the company could operate at even below $40 a barrel, but “we’re not here to sell our reserves at a marginal cost.”

Westbeck’ portfolio includes global upstream oil explorers such as Parex Resources (TO:PXT), Premier Oil (LON:PMO), Tullow Oil (LON:TLW), Gran Tierra Energy (NYSE:GTE), Aker BP (OL:AKERBP) and Enquest (LON:ENQ).

h3 Painful Differential Pricing/h3