Dog days for the wildcatters
The creditworthiness of independents is falling. Barely-positive cash flow and weak enthusiasm for consolidation may not be enough to save them
While US shale production volume continues its unremitting rise, the pioneers of the industry are struggling to keep their heads above water without injections of fresh capital. The latest firm to fail was Sanchez Energy Corporation on 11 August, with $2.275bn of debt. It was the 26th bankruptcy of the year and leaves the total just shy of the 28 that succumbed during the whole of 2018. Corporate law firm Haynes and Boone found that the 192 failures since 2015 involved more than $47bn of debt. It is not surprising that investors are losing patience. Free cash flow—which facilitates capital spending without outside financing or the sale of assets—is a key measure of financial health. The Inst
Also in this section
9 January 2026
OPEC+ remains on track as output falls, with only Gabon failing to hit its output targets in December, although Kazakhstan’s compliance was involuntary
9 January 2026
The Latin American producer’s crude prospects rely on a multi-pronged approach where even the relatively easy wins will take considerable time, effort and cost
9 January 2026
While many forecasters are reasserting the importance of oil and gas, petrostates should be under no illusion things are changing, and faster than they might think
8 January 2026
Indonesia and Malaysia are at the dawn of breathtaking digital capabilities. Their energy infrastructure must keep up with their ambitions






