Abstract

This study discovered market determinants of credit default swap (CDS) spreads in the North American oil and gas industry. Due to the limited theoretical background on market sources of CDS price fluctuations, we chose to alleviate model uncertainty and possible misspecification issues using Bayesian model averaging. This robust framework allowed us to aggregate results from a vast number of linear panel models estimated over the 2017–2020 period. We identified oil price volatility, major shifts in the OPEC+ supply policy, natural gas prices and industrial metal prices as the most robust determinants of CDS spreads. We show that following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, oil prices ceased to be a notably important determinant of credit risk, as factors indirectly related to oil prices, such as global and sectoral uncertainty, financial conditions and the macroeconomic stance became more influential. Additionally, we show that the CDS spreads of shale companies are determined by similar common factors, but they are more sensitive to the OPEC+ decisions on the global supply and are less affected by the domestic activity. Finally, we also prove that our modelling approach may help investors and risk officers to identify robust determinants behind the dynamics of credit risk.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSince the introduction of the combined technology of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal well drilling in 2011, the oil market has undergone revolutionary changes

  • The current pandemic crisis has vividly demonstrated the significant increase in the default risk of firms from the oil and gas industry in the US and Canada

  • Estimates are presented in the left part of Table 5, whereas Figure 3 shows the specifications of the models with the highest posterior model probability (PMP) that account in total for 95% of the PMP

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Summary

Introduction

Since the introduction of the combined technology of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal well drilling in 2011, the oil market has undergone revolutionary changes This technological advancement has granted access to cheap, hydrocarbon-rich shale deposits in the US and Canada. The large-scale shale oil extraction in North America has propelled the OPEC cartel in 2014 to oversupply the market of crude oil, thereby provoking the oil prices to plummet. The premise for these actions was based upon the fact that for unconventional sources the break-even point is still higher than for largest conventional producers, such as Saudi Arabia. The shale oil and gas revolution has increased the dependency of oil and gas producers on global

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