Select your local Natixis site for products and services by region

Americas

Asia Pacific

Europe

Location not listed?

eagle
Next decade investing
The seismic shifts shaping the investment landscape today, and the key trends that will continue to define investor thinking over the next ten years.
About us
Equities

Is the world sleep-walking into an oil crisis?

November 10, 2025 - 8 min
Is the world sleep-walking into an oil crisis?

For decades, the oil industry was defined by reinvestment. When prices were high, cash was recycled into new exploration, drilling, and supply. The last ten years broke the cycle. Over the past decade, large-cap oil and gas companies have generated extraordinary cash flows, yet much of that money was diverted into green-energy initiatives, and even more into shareholder distributions through dividends and buybacks.

At first glance, this seems like healthy discipline: avoiding the waste of past booms, rewarding shareholders, and spending cautiously on transition projects. However, if you follow the capital-allocation trail, history shows a different pattern. When oil companies divert capital away from upstream reinvestment, the result is the same: future supply crunches. Today, with shale rolling over and global decline rates rising, the warning signs are flashing again.

 

Diverted CapEx and historical parallels

The diversion of cash flows away from oil production is not new. One of the clearest examples came in 1979, when Exxon acquired Reliance Electric, a Midwestern manufacturer of motors and automation systems. As explored in Capital Allocation Almanac, Volume 2, “When Big Oil Tried to Go Electric”, the deal reflected a familiar late-cycle impulse: seeking growth outside the core business as the cycle peaks. Exxon paid more than $1 billion for Reliance, only to divest it less than a decade later at a fraction of the price. It remains a case study in how capital misallocation, not geology, often drives scarcity: every dollar spent diversifying away from energy is a dollar not invested in future supply.

The pattern repeated in the 2000s, when majors poured money into downstream refining, petrochemicals, and gas while conventional exploration lagged. When global demand accelerated mid-decade, supply could not keep up, culminating in the 2008 oil-price spike. After the 2014 crash, companies swung the other way, prioritizing dividends and buybacks over new long-cycle projects. That decision looked prudent when prices were low but left the system unprepared when demand rebounded.

History’s lesson is simple: when the majors allocate away from oil, they starve the system of future supply, and the next crisis follows. 

 

Capital returns over reinvestment

Since COVID, the world’s top 20 oil and gas producers generated roughly $1 trillion in additional operating cash flow compared to the five years preceding the pandemic. Yet little of that new cash has gone toward expanding traditional oil supply.

Of that incremental $1 trillion, roughly 60% went to dividends, 25% to share buybacks, and the remaining 15% to other projects― mainly chemicals and renewables.

In other words, nearly four out of every five incremental dollars earned since COVID left the upstream system. For an industry defined by depletion, that marks a fundamental shift. The last time producers generated comparable cash flow― during the 2004–2008 cycle ― reinvestment surged. This time, it stagnated.

Saudi Aramco’s CEO Amin Nasser underscored the point, warning that the industry’s biggest mistake is “underinvesting in oil and gas supply during the energy-transition narrative.” He noted that global upstream spending, around $500 billion per year, remains $200 – 250 billion below what is needed to avoid a supply crunch later this decade. Even Aramco, the world’s lowest-cost operator, capped its sustainable capacity at 13 million barrels per day, focusing on maintaining that level through steady reinvestment rather than new greenfield expansion.

Upstream CapEx remains near pre-COVID levels in nominal terms and materially lower in real terms, even as free cash flow and shareholder distributions hit record highs. The industry is behaving as if shale’s flexibility will last forever.

The irony is that the same “capital discipline” investors reward today will be the source of tomorrow’s scarcity. Each dividend and buyback may look prudent in isolation but together represent a lost decade of reinvestment in an industry earning more than ever yet ill-prepared for what comes next.

 

Peak shale: the end of capital efficiency

For more than a decade, U.S. shale was the most productive investment story in the global energy market. Each dollar spent yielded barrels almost instantly. The infrastructure was already in place― pipelines, refineries, and service capacity built over generations. Unlike deepwater projects that required years of lead time, shale wells could be drilled and producing within months.

The short cycle responsiveness was the key to shale’s success. It was not just about geology, but capital efficiency. Shale allowed the industry to grow output without the multi-year investment cycles that defined earlier eras. It became the world’s swing supply, the shock absorber that balanced markets whenever prices moved.

But that era is ending. The best acreage in the Permian, Eagle Ford, and Bakken has been drilled. Productivity gains have flattened. “High-grading,” or drilling only the most productive zones, boosted short-term output, but accelerated long-term decline. The remaining rigs are moving into less prolific zones, where wells cost more, decline faster, and produce less.

As shale development spreads into new basins, the infrastructure advantage disappears. Each new field requires additional gathering, processing, and transport capacity. What made shale high-return was that the hard work had already been done; the next phase will not have that inheritance.

For years, shale’s short-cycle nature enabled companies to avoid big, long-cycle projects. They could return cash to shareholders while remaining confident shale could fill any gap. That cushion is now gone. Replacing shale barrels requires more capital, longer lead times, and higher break-even prices.

The world’s low-cost swing supply is losing its elasticity. History shows what happens when that transition collides with strong demand: volatility, scarcity, and the seeds of the next oil shock.

 

The decline rate problem: shale’s hidden cost

The defining strength of the shale revolution was speed. U.S. producers brought new supply online in months, not years. But that same speed came with a cost: decline. Each new shale well delivers rapid output followed by steep losses ― typically 60–70% in the first year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).

As U.S. tight oil grew from near zero in 2008 to roughly 10% of global liquids supply today, those declines became embedded in the global production mix. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates the world’s observed decline rate has risen from 3.5 – 4% before the shale boom to 4.5 – 5% today. Short cycle barrels now make up a larger share of total supply, and they fade faster than conventional oil.

Conventional fields in OPEC and offshore basins once provided multi-decade stability, with decline rates below 3%. By contrast, today’s mix of short-lived shale wells and aging conventional assets requires constant drilling just to hold output flat. When capital slows, production declines almost immediately.

In short, the shale era traded longevity for flexibility. The world gained a supply source that could respond to prices quickly but lost the endurance that kept decline rates low. Now, with investment discipline limiting reinvestment, the global system faces a sharper decline curve than it has in decades.

 

Transition: when the math stops working

The numbers no longer add up. The world must replace four to five million barrels a day of natural decline each year, roughly the output of an entire OPEC member, to remain flat. Yet reinvestment in new long-cycle projects is at record lows. Shale, which once filled that gap, is now peaking. OPEC’s spare capacity is thin, and Russia’s production faces rising risks from infrastructure damage and sanctions. For the first time in decades, every major source of incremental supply is constrained at once.

As Amin Nasser put it, “Underinvestment, not peak demand, will be the dominant force shaping energy markets in the years ahead.” Aramco’s strategy reflects that reality: maintaining roughly $50 billion a year in upstream CapEx through 2028 to preserve 13 million barrels per day of sustainable capacity, not by building new megaprojects, but through continuous reinvestment in existing assets.

Capital discipline may look like prudence, but in an industry built on decline, it is the slow arithmetic of scarcity. 

 

The capital allocation view

The capital-allocation choices of the past decade have created a fragile supply picture. Billions have been diverted into green projects that, while politically popular, do not meaningfully replace oil supply. Trillions have been returned to shareholders rather than reinvested in upstream capacity. The majors look disciplined today, but history shows this discipline eventually produces its own crisis.

The winners will be the few producers and countries still willing to invest countercyclically in oil supply before the next shortage hits. The warnings are clear: diverted CapEx, shale exhaustion, and accelerating decline all point to a structural undersupply risk. The next oil shock will not come from a demand boom, but from a decade of capital restraint.

 

Vaughan Nelson’s capital allocation framework and ‘Winners & Warnings’ series

There are few irrefutable truths in investing. Prudent capital allocation, however, is almost always at the heart of success. Companies, industries, and countries that invest in high-return opportunities while others hesitate consistently outperform.

Vaughan Nelson’s Winners & Warnings series examines these dynamics in real time, identifying the conditions that shape tomorrow’s leaders. Guided by its Capital Allocation Framework (CAF), the Vaughan Nelson team assesses not only what companies do, but when and why. By tracking industry investment levels and returns on capital, they aim to capture the inflection points where leadership changes.

 

For Further Reading

Capital Allocation Almanac | Vol. 2 — “When Big Oil Tried to Go Electric”

Follow Vaughan Nelson Deputy CIO Adam Rich @AdamRich_CAF on X (formerly Twitter) for more investment insights

This material has been provided for information purposes only to investment service providers or other Professional Clients, Qualified or Institutional Investors and, when required by local regulation, only at their written request. This material must not be used with Retail Investors.

In the E.U.: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers International or one of its BRANCH offices listed below. Natixis Investment Managers International is a portfolio management company authorized by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (French Financial Markets Authority - AMF) under no. GP 90-009, and a simplified joint-stock company (société par actions simplifiée - SAS) registered in the Paris Trade and Companies Register under no. 329 450 738, Registered office: 43 avenue Pierre Mendès France, 75013 Paris. Germany: Natixis Investment Managers International, Zweigniederlassung Deutschland (Registration number: HRB 129507). Registered office: Senckenberganlage 21, 60325 Frankfurt am Main. Italy: Natixis Investment Managers International Succursale Italiana (Registration number: MI-2637562). Registered office: Via Adalberto Catena, 4, 20121 Milan, Italy. Netherlands: Natixis Investment Managers International, Dutch BRANCH (Registration number: 000050438298), Registered office: Stadsplateau 7, 3521AZ Utrecht, the Netherlands. Spain: Natixis Investment Managers International S.A., Sucursal en España (Registration number: NIF W0232616C), Registered office: Serrano n°90, 6th Floor, 28006  Madrid, Spain. Luxembourg: Natixis Investment Managers International, Luxembourg BRANCH (Registration number: B283713), Registered office: 2, rue Jean Monnet, L-2180 Luxembourg, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Belgium: Natixis Investment Managers International, Belgian BRANCH (Registration number: 1006.931.462), Gare Maritime, Rue Picard 7, Bte 100, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium.

In Switzerland: Provided for information purposes only by Natixis Investment Managers, Switzerland Sàrl (Registration number: CHE-114.271.882), Rue du Vieux Collège 10, 1204 Geneva, Switzerland or its representative office in Zurich, Schweizergasse 6, 8001 Zürich.

In the British Isles: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers UK Limited which is authorised and regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA firm reference no. 190258) - registered office: Natixis Investment Managers UK Limited, Level 4, Cannon Bridge House, 25 Dowgate Hill, London, EC4R 2YA. When permitted, the distribution of this material is intended to be made to persons as described as follows: in the United Kingdom: this material is intended to be communicated to and/or directed at investment professionals and professional investors only; in Ireland: this material is intended to be communicated to and/or directed at professional investors only; in

Guernsey: this material is intended to be communicated to and/or directed at only financial services providers which hold a license from the Guernsey Financial Services Commission; in Jersey: this material is intended to be communicated to and/or directed at professional investors only; in the Isle of Man: this material is intended to be communicated to and/or directed at only financial services providers which hold a license from the Isle of Man Financial Services Authority or insurers authorised under section 8 of the Insurance Act 2008.

In the DIFC: Provided in and from the DIFC financial district by Natixis Investment Managers Middle East (DIFC Branch) which is regulated by the DFSA. Related financial products or services are only available to persons who have sufficient financial experience and understanding to participate in financial markets within the DIFC, and qualify as Professional Clients or Market Counterparties as defined by the DFSA. No other Person should act upon this material.  Registered office: Unit  L10-02, Level 10 ,ICD Brookfield Place, DIFC, PO Box 506752, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

In Japan: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Japan Co., Ltd. Registration No.: Director-General of the Kanto Local Financial Bureau (kinsho) No.425. Content of Business: The Company conducts investment management business, investment advisory and agency business and Type II Financial Instruments Business as a Financial Instruments Business Operator.

In Taiwan: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Securities Investment Consulting (Taipei) Co., Ltd., a Securities Investment Consulting Enterprise regulated by the Financial Supervisory Commission of the R.O.C. Registered address: 34F., No. 68, Sec. 5, Zhongxiao East Road, Xinyi Dist., Taipei City 11065, Taiwan (R.O.C.), license number 2020 FSC SICE No. 025, Tel. +886 2 8789 2788.

In Singapore: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Singapore Limited (NIM Singapore) having office at 5 Shenton Way, #22-05/06, UIC Building, Singapore 068808 (Company Registration No. 199801044D) to distributors and qualified investors for information purpose only. NIM Singapore is regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore under a Capital Markets Services Licence to conduct fund management activities and is an exempt financial adviser. Mirova Division (Business Name Registration No.: 53431077W) and Ostrum Division (Business Name Registration No.: 53463468X) are part of NIM Singapore and are not separate legal entities. This advertisement or publication has not been reviewed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

In Hong Kong: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Hong Kong Limited to professional investors for information purpose only.

In Australia: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Australia Pty Limited (ABN 60 088 786 289) (AFSL No. 246830) and is intended for the general information of financial advisers and wholesale clients only.

In New Zealand: This document is intended for the general information of New Zealand wholesale investors only and does not constitute financial advice. This is not a regulated offer for the purposes of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (FMCA) and is only available to New Zealand investors who have certified that they meet the requirements in the FMCA for wholesale investors. Natixis Investment Managers Australia Pty Limited is not a registered financial service provider in New Zealand.

In Korea: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers Korea Limited (Registered with Financial Services Commission for General Private Collective Investment Business) to distributors and qualified investors for information purpose only.

In Colombia: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers International Oficina de Representación (Colombia) to professional clients for informational purposes only as permitted under Decree 2555 of 2010. Any products, services or investments referred to herein are rendered exclusively outside of Colombia. This material does not constitute a public offering in Colombia and  is addressed to less than 100 specifically identified investors.

In Latin America: Provided by Natixis Investment Managers International.

In Chile: Esta oferta privada se inicia el día de la fecha de la presente comunicación. La presente oferta se acoge a la Norma de Carácter General N° 336 de la Superintendencia de Valores y Seguros de Chile. La presente oferta versa sobre valores no inscritos en el Registro de Valores o en el Registro de Valores Extranjeros que lleva la Superintendencia de Valores y Seguros, por lo que los valores sobre los cuales ésta versa, no están sujetos a su fiscalización. Que por tratarse de valores no inscritos, no existe la obligación por parte del emisor de entregar en Chile información pública respecto de estos valores. Estos valores no podrán ser objeto de oferta pública mientras no sean inscritos en el Registro de Valores correspondiente.

In Mexico: Provided by Natixis IM Mexico, S. de R.L. de C.V., which is not a regulated financial entity, securities intermediary, or an investment manager in terms of the Mexican Securities Market Law (Ley del Mercado de Valores) and is not registered with the Comisión Nacional Bancaria y de Valores (CNBV) or any other Mexican authority. Any products, services or investments referred to herein that require authorization or license are rendered exclusively outside of Mexico. While shares of certain ETFs may be listed in the Sistema Internacional de Cotizaciones (SIC), such listing does not represent a public offering of securities in Mexico, and therefore the accuracy of this information has not been confirmed by the CNBV. Natixis Investment Managers is an entity organized under the laws of France and is not authorized by or registered with the CNBV or any other Mexican authority. Any reference contained herein to “Investment Managers” is made to Natixis Investment Managers and/or any of its investment management subsidiaries, which are also not authorized by or registered with the CNBV or any other Mexican authority.

In Uruguay: Provided by Natixis IM Uruguay S.A. Office: San Lucar 1491, Montevideo, Uruguay, CP 11500. The sale or offer of any units of a fund qualifies as a private placement pursuant to section 2 of Uruguayan law 18,627.

In Brazil: Provided to a specific identified investment professional for information purposes only by Natixis Investment Managers International. This communication cannot be distributed other than to the identified addressee. Further, this communication should not be construed as a public offer of any securities or any related financial instruments. Natixis Investment Managers International is a portfolio management company authorized by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (French Financial Markets Authority - AMF) under no. GP 90-009, and a simplified joint-stock company (société par actions simplifiée - SAS) registered in the Paris Trade and Companies Register under no. 329 450 738. Registered office: 43 avenue Pierre Mendès France, 75013 Paris.

The above referenced entities are business development units of Natixis Investment Managers, the holding company of a diverse line-up of specialised investment management and distribution entities worldwide. The investment management subsidiaries of Natixis Investment Managers conduct any regulated activities only in and from the jurisdictions in which they are licensed or authorized. Their services and the products they manage are not available to all investors in all jurisdictions.

Although Natixis Investment Managers believes the information provided in this material to be reliable, including that from third party sources, it does not guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, or completeness of such information.

The provision of this material and/or reference to specific securities, sectors, or markets within this material does not constitute investment advice, or a recommendation or an offer to buy or to sell any security, or an offer of any regulated financial activity. Investors should consider the investment objectives, risks and expenses of any investment carefully before investing. The analyses, opinions, and certain of the investment themes and processes referenced herein represent the views of the individual(s) as of the date indicated. These, as well as the portfolio holdings and characteristics shown, are subject to change and cannot be construed as having any contractual value. There can be no assurance that developments will transpire as may be forecasted in this material. The analyses and opinions expressed by external third parties are independent and does not necessarily reflect those of Natixis Investment Managers. Any past performance information presented is not indicative of future performance.

This material may not be distributed, published, or reproduced, in whole or in part.

All amounts shown are expressed in USD unless otherwise indicated.

DR-74876