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Schlumberger Plans U.S. Pullback as Shale Oil Drillers Struggle - Wall Street Journal

“The international market is poised for further growth,” said the firm’s CEO. Photo: ali haider/Shutterstock

The world’s largest oil-field services company, Schlumberger Ltd., is pulling back from the U.S. and focusing on international projects as a slowdown in shale drilling reverberates through the industry.

Chief Executive Olivier Le Peuch said Friday that diminishing shale production growth could reduce a plentiful supply of oil globally and create greater market reliance on production outside the U.S. The company is positioning itself accordingly, he said, restructuring its business in the U.S. and reducing its fracking fleet there by 50% while diverting spending abroad.

“The international market is poised for further growth,” Mr. Le Peuch said on a call with investors. “By contrast, North America will depend on our execution of our strategy. There is downside risk.”

Schlumberger’s business in the U.S. weighed on the company’s performance throughout 2019. The company reported a more than $10 billion net loss for the full year due to more than $12 billion in write-downs, most of them related to U.S. assets.

In the fourth quarter, Schlumberger’s profit also fell as it reported an increase in various charges, most of them also related to its U.S. business. The company said Friday net income was $333 million for the quarter, down 38% from the comparable quarter a year earlier, as a reduction in spending by U.S. shale producers cut into revenues.

“North America revenue of $2.5 billion…dropped 14% sequentially due to customer budget exhaustion and cash flow constraints,” Mr. Le Peuch said. Earnings per share were 24 cents, down from 39 cents a share.

Meanwhile, prospects abroad have grown brighter for the company. While full-year world-wide revenue of $32.9 billion was flat compared with a year prior, international revenue grew 7%, compared with a 10% decline in North America.

Investors have cut off cash infusions to shale producers, after frackers have largely failed to turn a profit for years. Meanwhile, technology gains in the shale patch have slowed as drillers struggle to wring more oil from each well. Those factors have forced austerity on shale producers, whose dwindling budgets have had a severe impact on the service companies who drill and frack their wells.

Mr. Le Peuch said he expects spending by North American producers to potentially decline by more than 10% in 2020. By contrast, international spending will grow by 5% or more, he said, as companies return to offshore projects.

The oil-and-gas industry had pulled back from costly offshore projects in recent years as companies focused investment on promising shale prospects. But as profits have failed to materialize a decade into the shale boom, major oil companies including Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp., are recalibrating.

Chevron and Exxon Mobil have written off billions in U.S. natural gas assets in recent years, shifting their shale focus primarily to the oil-rich Permian basin in Texas and New Mexico. Both have also renewed their appetite for offshore projects.

The U.S. has more than doubled its crude output over the last decade. Much of the growth is due to the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico. WSJ traces the hotspot of North America’s crude oil boom, with a look at challenges that producers in the region face.

Chevron recently approved a large offshore project in the Gulf of Mexico and Exxon has been investing heavily in a huge oil find in the waters off the coast of Guyana, where oil began flowing in December.

Schlumberger has been re-evaluating its business in the U.S. at the direction of Mr. Le Peuch, who became CEO in July. He said Friday that review had prompted a retrenchment in the U.S.

Going forward, Schlumberger will reduce its operating locations by 25%, focusing on only three hubs near the largest shale basins. In addition to the dramatic cuts to its fracking fleet, the company has laid off more than 1,400 employees in North America, and Mr. Le Peuch said Friday that further workforce reductions are possible.

The company recorded $456 million in impairment and other charges from items including restructuring in North America and workforce reductions. A year earlier, the company recorded $172 million in various charges.

"As the year progresses, the effect of slowing North America production growth is likely to cause tightness in the market and further stimulate international operators to step up their investments in the second half of the year and beyond,” Mr. Le Peuch said.

Write to Christopher M. Matthews at christopher.matthews@wsj.com

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