The world has noticed the volatile and unpredictable nature of the global oil sector in recent months. To be fair, one would struggle not to take notice of the fluctuating oil and gas prices the world has been subjected to as of late. Now, Diamondback Energy, a staple of the US energy sector and a major player in the Permian Basin, has reported that it believes additional oil output is unnecessary until the global prices stabilize and the market cools down a bit. The company recently provided some details for this reasoning in its letter to shareholders outlining the company’s performance this quarter.
Red light, green light, one, two, three, says the US shale operator
Diamondback Energy has become a mainstay of the US oil sector since the company began operations in 2007. Since then, the US shale operator has seen incremental growth over the past 18 years. Now, in a recent letter to shareholders, the firm stated that earlier this year it entered into what it calls a “spotlight phase”. Noting that the company would shift operations to “green” and accelerate production if the market stabilized.
Alternatively, it would shift to the “red” stage if the oil price kept dropping like a boulder rolling down the side of a mountain. In the letter sent to shareholders, the company’s management said that at the moment, the operations are sitting in the “yellow” phase, maintaining flat levels of production, and that it could shift to red or green if deemed necessary. The market volatility and instability are on full display for the world to see.
Industry analysts are split over the oversupply forecasts for Diamondback Energy
The shale operator noted that due to the “hot debate” regarding the oversupply concerns, the company’s forecast for the first half of 2026 is undetermined, and several energy watchdogs have the forecast split, with OPEC forecasting 500,000 barrels per day, while the IEA, or the International Energy Agency, set the number on the other end of the scale and forecast 4 million bpd. The company noted that the “sweet spot” is somewhere in between those two numbers.
“Against this backdrop, we firmly believe there is no need for incremental oil barrels until there is a proper price signal.” – Diamondback chief executive Kaes Van’t Hof
Diamondback has reduced its capital expenditures while increasing output in Q3
The company reported that it reduced its capital expenditures by $500 million in the last two consecutive quarters, mostly attributing that to a “deliberate moderation of activity”. Despite the overwhelming headwinds, the company increased output to 503,000 barrels per day of crude oil during Q3. This is remarkably 57% higher than the same period last year. Despite market headwinds, the sector is still immensely profitable.
The company outperformed the expectations of industry analysts who forecasted 918,000 boepd, with the reality of the company’s average output sitting closer to 943,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, which is a 65% year-over-year increase. Other energy majors have reported similar output declines in other energy sectors, pointing to the volatility of the market at the moment due to the uncertainty of the future for the sector.
Diamondback Energy has reported some incredible profits this year
Despite the market headwinds and issues in the sector overall, Diamondback Energy saw its profits skyrocket by 54% to $1.12 billion. While its revenue increased by 48% year over year to $3.92 billion. With upstream investments this year totaling in the billions, as evidenced by the Middle East investment plans for 2025, the market is set to bounce back following the instability it has experienced this year. That market uncertainty and vicarious price changes can be directly attributed to the ongoing war in Ukraine and subsequent sanctions on Russia and its energy companies.





