zerohedge.com / by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2015 16:31
On Tuesday the market got yet another reminder of just how painful the “current commodity price environment” has been for producers when Chesapeake eliminated its common dividend in order to conserve cash.
After noting the plunge in Chesapeake’s shares (to a 12-year low) we subsequently outlined
why the US shale “revolution” is now running out of lifelines as hedges
roll off and as the next round of credit line assessments looms in
October.
A persistent theme here – as regular readers are no doubt aware – has
been the extent to which an ultra-accommodative Fed has contributed to a
deflationary supply glut by ensuring that beleaguered producers retain
access to capital markets. In short, cash-strapped companies who would
have otherwise gone out of business have been able to stay afloat thanks
to the fact that Fed policy has herded investors into risk assets.
In a ZIRP world, there’s plenty of demand for new HY issuance
and ill-fated secondaries, which means the digging, drilling, and
pumping gets to continue indefinitely in what may end up being one of
the most dramatic instances of malinvestment the market has ever seen.
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