Friday, August 21, 2015

Oil Companies With Worst Performances Sell Crude Oil More Than Exxon Mobil



In North America, various oil companies with poor records in the market are performing excellent and earning more from their crude oil against the huge companies. The inverse is true for Exxon Mobil Corporation.

This rise may not last long for Goodrich Petroleum Corp., according to Bloomberg in a report, the biggest floating company with the independent production among all in North America, sold its production of $86.49 per barrel during the 2nd quarter of the year.

Halcon Resources Corp. is another company that is not very well known, suffered 49% declination throughout the year, step forward with the gain of $81.18 per barrel. Both of these companies, which are known for the worst performance, chase both the companies Exxon Mobil and Chevron Corp., which collected an average of $54.26 and XOM got $56.90 per barrel.

The main reason was the shortage of cash. Small companies with small investments along with risky credits, purchased insurance against oil crash that locked in higher rates and encourage the investors with the guarantee of payback. The situation was much tensed and critical because the oil prices continuously declined by more than 60% from the 6th month of 2014. Now it is at the position, as it was $42 per barrel in 2009.

The well-known reputed companies are suffering from a downturn and their stock prices are sliding just like XOM stock for these companies. On August 11, Leo Mariani, an expert analyst from Royal Bank of Canada Capital Markets in Austin, Texas, stated via phone, “The more debt you have, the more hedges you need to protect yourself in a downturn.”

Furthermore, he said, “That’s why the really big companies don’t have hedges. They don’t have much debt, and they don’t need them.”

Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) can survive without any kind of hedge because according to the company’s report last month regarding their savings, it has $4.3 billion, even after they suffered from the worst quarterly profit this year since 2009.

Some of the analysts have acknowledged that when the oil hedges ends in 2017. The short-term performing companies, such as Goodrich and Halcon, will be reversed to their old position and might experience the twist. Hedges defend them through the year and many companies are not in the favor to add new protection, assuming currently that prices shattered. These days are tough for the giant companies. The company that survives the tensed situation will be the winner and will recover the losses soon in the future.

Exxon has also opted not to hedge to defend itself. It can afford to sustain and manage under such situations in the oil market.

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