Oil costs are their lowest for the reason that pandemic, revenues are falling, and earnings are shrinking, however some frackers and oilfield gamers are abruptly thriving within the inventory market as they put money into energy era for information facilities and journey the AI wave.
Liberty Vitality—the fracking firm cofounded by U.S. Vitality Secretary Chris Wright—noticed its inventory soar 30% after asserting on October 17 it will greater than double its deliberate energy era capability for information facilities. Halliburton’s inventory is up about 15% this month since revealing its 20% possession stake in VoltaGrid and its plans to accomplice on powering information facilities worldwide. Different main oilfield gamers resembling Baker Hughes, trade chief SLB, and Solaris Vitality Infrastructure are investing massive within the information heart energy rush as properly.
“The demand for power and for AI is like nothing I’ve ever seen in terms of demand growth,” stated Halliburton chairman and CEO Jeff Miller throughout an Oct. 21 earnings name. “We also know that, not only in the U.S., but around the world [AI] is a really big opportunity set for the same level of growth.”
The AI energy push from some drillers and fracking corporations comes as they face the double whammy of weak oil costs and years of declining exercise due to elevated effectivity from drilling rigs and hydraulic fracturing, or frac, fleets.
U.S. oil manufacturing is at an all-time excessive of 13.6 million barrels per day—though it’s believed to have plateaued—though the variety of frac fleets required within the U.S. dipped greater than 50% in six years as bigger wells had been accomplished extra shortly. For AI, most corporations are utilizing on-site pure gasoline generator units or modestly sized gas-fired generators.
Tom Curran, vitality know-how analyst with Seaport Analysis Companions, instructed Fortune the ability alternative is an rising brilliant spot in an trade struggling via a stoop.
“It’s very real, it’s early, and it’s to be determined which sort of approaches and types of contracts prove to be the most competitive,” Curran stated. “Investors are still ascending the learning curve and trying to get comfortable with the risk-reward profiles of this new niche that’s arisen.”
Considerably surprisingly, the most important grievance of Liberty CEO Ron Gusek was directed on the boss of his former boss—President Trump—particularly on the metal and aluminum wanted for energy tools.
“The secretary of energy (former Liberty CEO Chris Wright) has called the race for AI dominance our next Manhattan Project,” Gusek stated in his Oct. 17 earnings name. “Winning this race requires access to massive amounts of new power generation capacity and associated hardware, along with many other sophisticated components. Much of this is currently made overseas, and much of it is now subject to tariffs.”
“Is this a path to winning a race the administration has identified as so critical to our nation’s future? I would argue, no. It’s a path to mediocrity at best. I hope we quickly pivot to a different course, one that puts us firmly on the path to energy and AI dominance here in the U.S.”
Various approaches to catch the AI bump
Liberty Vitality already had invested massive in pure gasoline generator tools to impress and energy its fracking providers within the oilfield, and now it’s adapting the digiPower know-how for information facilities. Fortuitously, the timing matches properly with the general trade development of electrifying the oilfield and transitioning away from dirtier diesel energy.
Liberty is rising its energy era capability from a deliberate 400 megawatts to greater than 1 gigawatt—sufficient to energy about 750,000 properties—via 2027. Additional will increase are anticipated to satisfy the rising demand, Gusek stated.
“My expectation is we probably end up with a higher percentage of our capacity with data center customers than maybe we had anticipated at the outset of our foray into this business,” he stated. “We are confident in the growth trajectory of our power business and are expanding our power deliveries in anticipation of customer conversions from our expansive pipeline of opportunities.”
Liberty and Halliburton—partnered with VoltaGrid—are each leaning on variations of reciprocating pure gasoline generator units lined up one after one other at information facilities. VoltaGrid simply introduced a take care of Oracle to ship 2.3 gigawatts of energy for information facilities.
Whether or not the on-site energy is a brief or long-term resolution for hyperscalers, Liberty has a solution. Liberty additionally partnered with nuclear energy startup Oklo for corporations to transition to Oklo’s small modular nuclear reactors in 5 years, as soon as they’re prepared to return on-line.
Halliburton, with its bigger world footprint, together with within the oil-dependent and tech-hungry Center East, goals to take its energy partnership worldwide on a “global industrial scale,” as CEO Miller described it on a latest name with analysts.
Different oilfield gamers, resembling Baker Hughes, SLB, and Solaris, are targeted on rising gasoline turbine manufacturing for information facilities. Solaris is working with xAI at its Memphis, Tenn., complicated. SLB is rising its “data center solutions” enterprise targeted on cooling techniques and different crucial {hardware}.
The important thing to long-term success, Seaport Analysis’s Curran stated, isn’t just pace however consistency.
“It’s one thing to go out and put together the capex and plow it into building a fleet of these assets and deliver them, set them up, and turn them on; it’s another thing to meet the standards of 24-7 power reliability,” Curran stated.
Gloomier present realities
Whereas the ability alternatives are brilliant, the present earnings stories are way more dour because the oil sector slogs together with weakened exercise.
Liberty posted third-quarter web revenue of $43 million, down 42% 12 months on 12 months, whereas quarterly revenues fell 17%.
Likewise, Halliburton’s web revenue plunged all the way down to a barely worthwhile $18 million—together with hefty impairment fees—from $571 million, though revenues solely fell 2%.
“Oil and gas industry frac activity has now fallen below levels required to sustain North American oil production,” Gusek stated. “Oil producers, which comprise a vast majority of North American frac activity, opted to moderate completions against the backdrop of macroeconomic uncertainty and after exceeding production targets during the first half of the year.”
The businesses are reducing their 2026 capex plans, retiring tools, slicing jobs, and doing as a lot belt tightening as they’ll.
There may be rising optimism that the worldwide oil glut—exacerbated by ongoing OPEC manufacturing hikes—will peak within the first half of 2026, permitting for the trade to rebound within the again half of subsequent 12 months, CEOs stated.
Curran sees that sentiment as bullish, even when it means a number of extra months of a downturn.
“We’re finally reaching the end of what has been this long, remarkable, continued increase in U.S. oil production while we’ve had an ongoing contraction in U.S. oilfield activity,” Curran stated. “That’s been because of this really miraculous continued upturn in productivity. Well, that finally seems to be reaching its end. That means, even if they want to hold oil production flat, they’re going to have to start picking up activity next year.”
