Nick O'Grady
Analyst · Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
I mean, maybe a touch, John, I'd say that, we have to think about how fragile the overall, let's -- I don't want to get on my macro horse here, but the overall market in general is quite fragile right now, right? And I'm not talking about the oil market per se. I'm talking about the entire capital markets. And so -- and you've had material selloffs to natural gas. You've had oil go through probably two hard selloffs in the last five months. But like anything else, this takes time. And so, you're correct. We definitely have seen cost rising year-over-year and certainly even since, say last fall. As Adam pointed out, the biggest challenge last year was not necessarily cost, but actually logistics like getting items. And I think I remember on a prior call saying, hey, building a steel pipe or sand or not, things that are going to be in long-term short, it's just going to take time and those thing. Those logistical things and shortages of materials have largely passed. I think where it goes from here is really going to be determined by as dumb as it may sound. It's going be determined by the price of crude. What you find is that overall EP margins stay relatively static over time, whether oil's a 100 or if it's 65. And so, if oil prices are to materially weaken, I would expect over time, you're going to see material reductions to margins for service providers as that overall activity falls. If prices hang in there and do their thing where they are today, I still think through drilling efficiencies, we continue to see operators drilling longer and longer laterals and larger amounts of wells at a pad level at any given time. And those will add up to material kind of collateral foot savings over time. And so, I would expect you probably can see some relief as time goes on. And, yes, I think as our program moves to be more balanced over the year, I think you've definitely seen a material slowdown in the Permian specifically in inflation of well cost. And so, I think that will ease it over time. I think to the extent that we're going to see any relief is going to -- we're going to have to wait and see over time. I think, you know, everyone from a service provider to and an operating group are going to have their chest puffed out when you see periods of volatility, and we'll see how that plays out.