Third of U.S. Shale Near Technical Insolvency, Deloitte Says

  • Two-month oil rally does little to help ease industry’s debts
  • U.S. shale producers may write down $300 billion this year

    

Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

Almost a third of U.S. shale producers are technically insolvent with crude at $35 a barrel, according to Deloitte LLP, highlighting the industry’s acute financial strain even as oil prices rebound from a record low earlier this year.

West Texas Intermediate edged up to $40.06 a barrel at 11:38 a.m. in New York, a substantially higher level compared with most of the last few months, especially April, when prices briefly went negative. But the rebound will do little to prevent 15 years of debt-fueled production growth catching up with many shale producers, Deloitte said in a study. Technical insolvency is an accounting way of saying a company will face problems meeting debt repayments.