KEY POINTS
  • The U.S. shale patch bears some of the highest production costs in the world, requiring a breakeven price of between $50 and $55 per barrel. 
  • Now, with Saudi Arabia and Russia’s planned production increases to battle for market share exacerbating the price crash brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, the sector faces what may well be a bloodbath. 
  • “U.S. shale is now economically unviable,” Chris Midgley, global head of analytics at S&P Global Platts, told CNBC.

Wednesday's Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing for Colorado-based Whiting Petroleum is a grim omen of things to come, experts say, as oil prices face historic collapse amid the coronavirus crisis and the Saudi-Russia oil price war.  

The company is the first U.S. shale producer to go under since the start of the year, when oil prices began to fall.