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Oil crash to drag on booming Texas economy

Monday, 9 February 2015




NEW YORK, Feb 8 (AFP) : As the saying goes, everything is bigger in Texas.
For the past five years, the economy of the Lone Star State has outperformed the rest of the United States.
But the collapse in oil prices has left Texas facing its toughest test since the financial crisis.
A 50 per cent tumble in oil prices since June has prompted companies such as Royal Dutch Shell and Chevron to slash billions of dollars in worldwide investment. Oil services companies like Schlumberger and Halliburton have announced thousands of job cuts.
So far, only a handful of petroleum companies have filed layoff notices in Texas this year, and the Texas Workforce Commission actually reported an increase in mining jobs in December.
Yet few doubt what lies ahead for the second-biggest US state, by economic output and population, after California.
There will be "a major-league contraction in oil and gas activity in Texas," said Karr Ingham, owner of Ingham Economic Reporting based in Amarillo in oil-rich West Texas.
"Over the coming months, the industry is going to shed jobs on a regular basis. We're very early in that process."
Boyd Nash-Stacey, senior economist at BBVA Research in Houston, predicted the downturn would cost some 60,000-80,000 mining jobs in Texas, with an additional ripple effect on other sectors such as retail and hospitality.
The oil slump already has begun to cool the real estate market in Houston, the fourth-biggest US city and an economic powerhouse for most of the 2000s due in large part to the surging energy industry.
"It's a question of how bad it's going to get and for how long," said Charles Gordon, a vice chairman of real estate firm CBRE in Houston. "The shock is how fast energy prices fell."
Texas has been outpacing US growth for some time. In 2013, the Texas economy grew at an annual clip of 3.7 per cent compared with 2.2 per cent for the whole economy, and in the prior year its pace was more than double the national rate, according to US Commerce Department data.
The throng of activity into older oil centers like the Permian Basin in West Texas and the newer Eagle Ford shale in southern Texas has been a driver.
Economists agree that matching that flaming growth level will be impossible in 2015, but there is debate about just how bad things will get.
JPMorgan Chase chief US economist Michael Feroli suggested in a December report that the outlook for Texas was comparable to 1986, when a steep drop in oil prices was followed by deep layoffs, big declines in the real-estate market and a banking crisis.