Anyone seen anything solid on rig counts for 2015 from any of the independents?
quote:
A few weeks ago there was an email from the top warning us about upcoming cuts needing to be made for the current oil market...
'While I look forward with great excitement to achieving the benefits of the
acquisition, we will not be immune to market conditions, and right now it looks
like 2015 is going to be a tough year. We have been through these before and
know how to navigate them while maintaining our focus on the future. We will
have to make reductions to our structure as any prudent business would. But I
want to be clear these reductions are related to market conditions, not the
acquisition. It's important to remember that distinction as we go forward. '
quote:quote:
A few weeks ago there was an email from the top warning us about upcoming cuts needing to be made for the current oil market...
'While I look forward with great excitement to achieving the benefits of the
acquisition, we will not be immune to market conditions, and right now it looks
like 2015 is going to be a tough year. We have been through these before and
know how to navigate them while maintaining our focus on the future. We will
have to make reductions to our structure as any prudent business would. But I
want to be clear these reductions are related to market conditions, not the
acquisition. It's important to remember that distinction as we go forward. '
Being an ex-Baker guy, there's just no way I believe that. Baker did the same thing when we bought BJ, they took the opportunity to trim fat. There's no way I'm buying into Haliburton saying it's not due to the acquisition.
quote:Every company does this, even when there aren'timpending cuts. It's prudent to know who your top employees are, and where your non-top performers are that are in roles where you need to keep them around for other reasons (SME knowledge, etc.). Not saying HAL won't make cuts, because it's evident that they will, but I wouldn't read into this as being an isolated event related directly to recent market conditions.
Halliburton had the management go through and rank employees within each pay band so in the event there are cuts that need to be made, this ranking will aid in determining who needs to go. Luckily I work for a boss who has years of experience here and knows exactly what this ranking means and knows to bump everyone on his team up as high as possible so that all layoffs fall in the other departments.
quote:That is interesting. The company I work for (not in energy sector) doesn't allow that to happen. Any team bigger than 7 or 8 people has to be ranked in a normal distribution. Yeah, I know, not fair if you have a strong team, but it prevents grade inflation.
Luckily I work for a boss who has years of experience here and knows exactly what this ranking means and knows to bump everyone on his team up as high as possible so that all layoffs fall in the other departments.
quote:
XOM ranks as well but we're losing people to retirements and not wanting to go to the Woodlands.
quote:quote:
XOM ranks as well but we're losing people to retirements and not wanting to go to the Woodlands.
You realize their campus is almost done, right?
quote:quote:quote:
XOM ranks as well but we're losing people to retirements and not wanting to go to the Woodlands.
You realize their campus is almost done, right?
So you don't think there are people who thought they could handle it, but after driving to the Woodlands after purposefully living in town have decided it ain't worth it?
quote:
XOM ranks as well but we're losing people to retirements and not wanting to go to the Woodlands.
quote:quote:
XOM ranks as well but we're losing people to retirements and not wanting to go to the Woodlands.
Shell ranks us every year, it's part of our bonus
quote:
Think there is anything significant to prices stabilizing the last couple of weeks?
quote:You don't think every other boss is doing the same thing with his or her department?
Luckily I work for a boss who has years of experience here and knows exactly what this ranking means and knows to bump everyone on his team up as high as possible so that all layoffs fall in the other departments.
quote:
Okay, I'll say a few words about chemicals...pretty pathetic if I'm considered knowledgeable, but while all of you were over at some big engineering building learning how to use divining rods, make holes in the ground, and hook tinker toys together, I was making molecules down the street. The chemical industry on the gulf coast is natural gas based, and will be that way for the coming decades. Depressed gas prices are great on the front end, because our feeds are dirt cheap, which means that shale gas has moved chemical investment back to the US from the ME. Margins have been great, and oil companies that have gas-based chemicals are making a boat-load of money, helping offset the decline in crude. The problem in a few years is going to be over-capacity, and just like drilling, economically disadvantaged plants will suffer. An even bigger problem would be a depressed general economy...since it doesn't matter how good your margins are if there's nobody to buy the plastic. Petrochemicals is probably about 10 - 15% of the total "oil" economy, but it's pretty important, and I wonder how much the big guys are relying on their chemical portfolios to keep them afloat.
quote:
Not sure if this has been asked, what is y'all's gauge on the direct/indirect effect in Dallas? Was thinking about buying a house soon and was worried about the local housing market to an extent.