04-10-2017, 08:20 PM
Hi weiyitan84,
I thought the last 10 years to be a somewhat good reflection of the industry cycle. It wasn't a 10 year downturn.
The only time the oil industry put their foot down on capex in past 10 years was after 2014. While there was a crash in oil prices in 2009, the quick recovery did not affect the planned capex from the oil majors. In fact, the continued rise and sustained high oil price encouraged speculative asset building from even small names like locally-listed Marco Polo Marine.
The boom years of oil asset building were from 2005 to 2013, when Rotary had $1.1b on its orderbooks. Some may say it was the biggest boom in 20 years. It is hard to imagine another boom like that in the near term. Eventually, the oil industry will find its footing and capex will resume. But how much of the capex budget will return, and when?
I thought the last 10 years to be a somewhat good reflection of the industry cycle. It wasn't a 10 year downturn.
The only time the oil industry put their foot down on capex in past 10 years was after 2014. While there was a crash in oil prices in 2009, the quick recovery did not affect the planned capex from the oil majors. In fact, the continued rise and sustained high oil price encouraged speculative asset building from even small names like locally-listed Marco Polo Marine.
The boom years of oil asset building were from 2005 to 2013, when Rotary had $1.1b on its orderbooks. Some may say it was the biggest boom in 20 years. It is hard to imagine another boom like that in the near term. Eventually, the oil industry will find its footing and capex will resume. But how much of the capex budget will return, and when?