Thread regarding Halliburton Co. layoffs

Halliburton will continue shrinking.

Another Oil Major Sees Peak Oil Demand On The Horizon

French energy giant Total SE (formerly Total S.A.) spread more doom and gloom into the oil markets today, foretelling of the oil industry's ultimate horror—peak oil demand.

In its Energy Outlook report published on Tuesday, according to Bloomberg, Total SE sees total global energy demand increasing in every scenario it ran—but according to Total, this will not help the oil industry. Instead, Total is attributing most of this energy demand increase to low-carbon power.

As such, oil demand growth, according to Total SE will end in a decade, in 2030.

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| 2373 views | | 6 replies (last October 27, 2020) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+17c2aMMM

6 replies (most recent on top)

“It’s not normally this small”
~ AJ

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Post ID: @rjsd+17c2aMMM

Wall Street Journal Oct 21, 2020 6:00am

Do we all think Halliburton could be eaten by bigger Fish. 🤔
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PAUL RATJE/AFP via Getty Images
Misery Loves Company: Behind the Boom in Oil Stock M&A

Another day, another potential oil company merger.

Pioneer Natural Resources is reportedly interested in acquiring Texas shale driller Parsley Energy, according to a Wall Street Journal report. And if the deal is consummated, it would just be the latest in a wave of oil patch mergers.

On Monday, ConocoPhillips agreed to buy Concho Resources, while Chevron completed its $13 billion acquisition of Noble Energy earlier this month, and Devon Energy’s takeout of WPX Energy was announced at the end of September. One analyst even argued recently that Chevron and Exxon Mobil should join forces.

Oil firms aren’t merging from a position of strength. Energy components of the S&P 500 are down more than 50% this year, while crude oil prices are off by a third.

Why the urge to merge? The companies are trying to turn around their fortunes by getting bigger and cutting costs. Wall Street thinks it’s a good idea. A possible Pioneer-Parsley combo was called a “high-quality acquisition” by one analyst, while another sees it driving even more mergers among struggling oil companies. Investors apparently like it too: Parsley stock is up 12% in early Tuesday trading.

As they say: misery loves company.

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Post ID: @lljm+17c2aMMM

Big Oil's $110 billion asset sale target could prove big ask.

Ron Bousso
Thu, October 1, 2020, 8:28 AM CDT
By Ron Bousso

LONDON (Reuters) - Leading energy companies are hoping to sell dozens of oil and gas fields and refineries worth more than $110 billion to curb both their ballooning debt and their carbon footprints.

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Post ID: @1uzt+17c2aMMM

Yes the sinking ship logo

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Post ID: @rir+17c2aMMM

Not to worry, Jeff isn't.

There is nothing that a new logo couldn't cure.

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Post ID: @irj+17c2aMMM

looks like Shell is expecting the low Oil demand to be around for a long time. Halliburton will not be able to recover under this conditions.

Energy producer Royal Dutch Shell said Wednesday it’s planning to cut between 7,000 and 9,000 jobs worldwide by the end of 2022 following a collapse in demand for oil and a subsequent slide in prices during the coronavirus pandemic.

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Post ID: @ztq+17c2aMMM

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