The number of U.S. rigs drilling for crude 鈥 a closely followed metric that can point to future oil output 鈥 fell by nine to 480 this week, the biggest drop since June 2023, according to data released by Baker Hughes Co. on April 11.
Domestic oil prices have been hovering around the low $60s-a-barrel, below levels that energy executives have said they need to make new drilling profitable. The rig-fleet decline reflects the anticipation of weakening demand in the U.S. shale patch, despite President Donald Trump鈥檚 push to supercharge U.S. production, said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Scott Levine.
鈥淩ig count has recently been steady,鈥 Levine said. 鈥淭his is a bigger drop than what we鈥檝e seen recently.鈥