Marketdash

When 'Drill, Baby, Drill' Meets Cold Economics: Oil Companies Can't Profit at $55

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 hours ago
Trump wanted more drilling, but crude at $55 per barrel puts many U.S. producers underwater. Here's who survives the shakeout and who's facing an existential crisis.

When Donald Trump took office in January 2025, his energy message couldn't have been clearer: "Drill, baby, drill." He declared a national energy emergency during his inaugural address, blamed inflation on "massive overspending and escalating energy prices," and promised to unlock America's "liquid gold."

Here's what nobody expected: the plan would work a little too well, and less than a year later, it's created an uncomfortable paradox. Oil is now trading near $55 per barrel—the lowest in nearly five years—and while consumers are thrilled at the pump, a huge chunk of the domestic oil industry is quietly drowning.

The problem is simple math. At $55, pumping crude just doesn't pencil out for most producers. The result? Growing concerns that parts of the U.S. oil sector might have to scale back operations or shut down entirely.

The Breakeven Problem Nobody Wanted to Talk About

Energy stocks took a beating this week as crude slipped to $55, sending the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) down 3% on Tuesday—its worst day since late June. Wall Street research desks started flashing warning signals.

According to a December 2025 survey from the Dallas Federal Reserve, most U.S. oil companies need WTI crude above $61 per barrel to profitably drill new wells. Below that threshold, only the biggest players—major oil companies and large independents—can sustain production.

"The average U.S. breakeven, if everyone is treated equally, is slightly above $60 per barrel, so it does impact quite a few players," Johannes Rauball, crude oil analyst at Kpler, told MarketDash.

Smaller private producers are in an especially tough spot. They don't have the scale or access to cutting-edge drilling technology that lets larger firms operate efficiently when prices tank. "Only large independents or oil majors can sustain production levels in a lower price environment," Rauball said.

Winners and Losers at $55 Oil

Not all oil companies are created equal, and at $55 per barrel, the survivors become pretty obvious.

Jeff Krimmel, founder of Krimmel Strategy Group, told MarketDash that companies like EOG Resources (EOG) and Diamondback Energy (FANG) have "plenty of room to spare" even if oil falls below $50 per barrel. These are the low-cost champions—operators who've mastered efficiency and can keep drilling profitably where others can't.

Then there's everyone else. Ovintiv (OVV), Marathon Oil (MRO), Murphy Oil (MUR), and Occidental Petroleum (OXY) would likely report losses at or below the $50 level. "I'd expect EOG and Diamondback to have more optionality in this lower oil price environment than Murphy and Occidental do," Krimmel said.

The disparity is stark. EOG's breakeven sits around $30 per barrel, while Occidental needs $58 just to break even. That's the difference between riding out the downturn comfortably and staring at red ink every quarter.

Supply Glut Meets Bearish Sentiment

Looking at the bigger picture, oil markets have been oversupplied for most of 2025, and that surplus is expected to continue through much of 2026. "I would argue prices reflect this reality," Krimmel said. "This market dynamic is well known and often discussed."

But here's where things get interesting. Krimmel thinks sentiment has turned too bearish, which could actually set up a rebound. "If I had to guess whether the next five-dollar move is up or down, I would guess it's up," he said. "Even small positive surprises could move oil prices back up from here."

It's a contrarian take, but not without logic. When everyone expects the worst, markets have a funny way of finding a floor.

CompanyEstimated Breakeven WTI Price ($/bbl)
EOG Resources$30
Diamondback Energy$35
ConocoPhillips$45
Devon Energy Corp. (DVN)$47
Permian Resources Corp. (PR)$47
Coterra Energy$50
Ovintiv$55
Marathon Oil$56
Murphy Oil$57
Occidental Petroleum$58
Source: Jeff Krimmel

The Russia-Ukraine Wild Card

There's another factor lurking in the background: the possibility of a Russia-Ukraine peace deal. Krimmel believes markets are already pricing in some resolution to the conflict. "I believe a near-term peace deal is priced into markets," he said, pointing to the Trump administration's active efforts to broker an agreement.

"With President Trump so personally involved, I think markets believe some form of peace will materialize in the near term," Krimmel added.

Prediction markets aren't quite as optimistic. According to Polymarket, traders are giving just a 25% probability that a peace deal gets signed by March 31, 2026. That's not exactly a consensus bet, but it's significant enough that any surprise breakthrough could jolt oil prices higher.

Survival of the Fittest

For now, $55 oil is functioning as a stress test for U.S. shale. The industry spent the last decade preaching capital discipline and shareholder returns instead of growth-at-any-cost. That philosophy is about to get tested in real time.

The irony is hard to miss. Trump's signature energy policy was designed to supercharge American oil production, but the unintended consequence is a price environment where only the most efficient operators can survive. "Drill, baby, drill" sounded great in theory, but in practice, it's revealing exactly who has the financial stamina to keep drilling when crude crashes.

The winners will be companies with rock-bottom breakevens and fortress balance sheets. The losers might not get a second chance.

When 'Drill, Baby, Drill' Meets Cold Economics: Oil Companies Can't Profit at $55

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 hours ago
Trump wanted more drilling, but crude at $55 per barrel puts many U.S. producers underwater. Here's who survives the shakeout and who's facing an existential crisis.

When Donald Trump took office in January 2025, his energy message couldn't have been clearer: "Drill, baby, drill." He declared a national energy emergency during his inaugural address, blamed inflation on "massive overspending and escalating energy prices," and promised to unlock America's "liquid gold."

Here's what nobody expected: the plan would work a little too well, and less than a year later, it's created an uncomfortable paradox. Oil is now trading near $55 per barrel—the lowest in nearly five years—and while consumers are thrilled at the pump, a huge chunk of the domestic oil industry is quietly drowning.

The problem is simple math. At $55, pumping crude just doesn't pencil out for most producers. The result? Growing concerns that parts of the U.S. oil sector might have to scale back operations or shut down entirely.

The Breakeven Problem Nobody Wanted to Talk About

Energy stocks took a beating this week as crude slipped to $55, sending the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) down 3% on Tuesday—its worst day since late June. Wall Street research desks started flashing warning signals.

According to a December 2025 survey from the Dallas Federal Reserve, most U.S. oil companies need WTI crude above $61 per barrel to profitably drill new wells. Below that threshold, only the biggest players—major oil companies and large independents—can sustain production.

"The average U.S. breakeven, if everyone is treated equally, is slightly above $60 per barrel, so it does impact quite a few players," Johannes Rauball, crude oil analyst at Kpler, told MarketDash.

Smaller private producers are in an especially tough spot. They don't have the scale or access to cutting-edge drilling technology that lets larger firms operate efficiently when prices tank. "Only large independents or oil majors can sustain production levels in a lower price environment," Rauball said.

Winners and Losers at $55 Oil

Not all oil companies are created equal, and at $55 per barrel, the survivors become pretty obvious.

Jeff Krimmel, founder of Krimmel Strategy Group, told MarketDash that companies like EOG Resources (EOG) and Diamondback Energy (FANG) have "plenty of room to spare" even if oil falls below $50 per barrel. These are the low-cost champions—operators who've mastered efficiency and can keep drilling profitably where others can't.

Then there's everyone else. Ovintiv (OVV), Marathon Oil (MRO), Murphy Oil (MUR), and Occidental Petroleum (OXY) would likely report losses at or below the $50 level. "I'd expect EOG and Diamondback to have more optionality in this lower oil price environment than Murphy and Occidental do," Krimmel said.

The disparity is stark. EOG's breakeven sits around $30 per barrel, while Occidental needs $58 just to break even. That's the difference between riding out the downturn comfortably and staring at red ink every quarter.

Supply Glut Meets Bearish Sentiment

Looking at the bigger picture, oil markets have been oversupplied for most of 2025, and that surplus is expected to continue through much of 2026. "I would argue prices reflect this reality," Krimmel said. "This market dynamic is well known and often discussed."

But here's where things get interesting. Krimmel thinks sentiment has turned too bearish, which could actually set up a rebound. "If I had to guess whether the next five-dollar move is up or down, I would guess it's up," he said. "Even small positive surprises could move oil prices back up from here."

It's a contrarian take, but not without logic. When everyone expects the worst, markets have a funny way of finding a floor.

CompanyEstimated Breakeven WTI Price ($/bbl)
EOG Resources$30
Diamondback Energy$35
ConocoPhillips$45
Devon Energy Corp. (DVN)$47
Permian Resources Corp. (PR)$47
Coterra Energy$50
Ovintiv$55
Marathon Oil$56
Murphy Oil$57
Occidental Petroleum$58
Source: Jeff Krimmel

The Russia-Ukraine Wild Card

There's another factor lurking in the background: the possibility of a Russia-Ukraine peace deal. Krimmel believes markets are already pricing in some resolution to the conflict. "I believe a near-term peace deal is priced into markets," he said, pointing to the Trump administration's active efforts to broker an agreement.

"With President Trump so personally involved, I think markets believe some form of peace will materialize in the near term," Krimmel added.

Prediction markets aren't quite as optimistic. According to Polymarket, traders are giving just a 25% probability that a peace deal gets signed by March 31, 2026. That's not exactly a consensus bet, but it's significant enough that any surprise breakthrough could jolt oil prices higher.

Survival of the Fittest

For now, $55 oil is functioning as a stress test for U.S. shale. The industry spent the last decade preaching capital discipline and shareholder returns instead of growth-at-any-cost. That philosophy is about to get tested in real time.

The irony is hard to miss. Trump's signature energy policy was designed to supercharge American oil production, but the unintended consequence is a price environment where only the most efficient operators can survive. "Drill, baby, drill" sounded great in theory, but in practice, it's revealing exactly who has the financial stamina to keep drilling when crude crashes.

The winners will be companies with rock-bottom breakevens and fortress balance sheets. The losers might not get a second chance.