The Annual Equipment of Pipeline and Oil &Gas Storage and Transportation Event
logo

The 15thBeijing International Natural Gas Technology & Equipment Exhibition

ufi

BEIJING, China

March 26-28,2025

LOCATION :Home > News> Industry News

U.S. oil companies set to benefit from Saudi supply disruption

Pubdate:2019-09-16 10:00 Source:liyanping Click:

NEW YORK (Bloomberg) --Some U.S. oil companies are positioned to gain from the attacks on Saudi Arabia’s facilities over the weekend and an attendant rise in crude prices.

The biggest moves could come from U.S. oil companies with a sizable short interest, including Apache, Continental Resources, Concho Resources, Devon Energy and Noble Energy, according to analysts at Houston-based Tudor Pickering Holt & Co.

“We are expecting strong performance across the entire energy complex tomorrow, and upstream should see some of the biggest gains as the increase in crude price will immediately flow through to improved cash flow,” the bank said in a note Sunday. “Given duration of outage, we suspect equity performance may be short-lived as investors continue to focus on imbalances in 2020 crude fundamentals.”

One other benefit is for those seeking to hedge across the forward curve for 2020 -- assuming the prices move that far into the future, according to the note.

Canadian oil producers, including Meg Energy Corp., Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and Cenovus Energy Inc., can also stand to gain from the outage.

One potential loser? Refineries that have to buy oil at higher prices. However, that might not result in their shares getting hit on Monday, the bank said. “In recent years refiner equities have become more correlated with short-term moves in crude prices, which is likely a function of refiners becoming a bigger part of energy index funds.”