The Frac Spread Count (FSC), Rig Count, and Frac Job Count (FJC) are three key metrics used to track activity in the U.S. oil and gas industry.
Each measures a different stage of the well lifecycle, and together they provide a complete view of drilling, completion activity, and near-term production trends.
Measures the number of active hydraulic fracturing crews. Indicates how many wells are being completed.
Measures the number of active drilling rigs. Indicates how many wells are being drilled.
These metrics track different stages of oil and gas development:
Because of this, they often move independently of one another.
The rig count has historically been used as a proxy for future production, but it has significant limitations:
As a result, rig count is a poor standalone indicator of near-term production.
The Frac Spread Count provides a more accurate view of current operational activity because it tracks active completion crews.
Since wells must be completed before producing, FSC is a closer indicator of near-term supply changes.
The Frac Job Count complements FSC by measuring how much work is actually being completed.
FJC helps quantify completion intensity and throughput.
Used together, these three metrics provide a complete view of the market:
- Rig Count → future drilling pipeline
- Frac Spread Count → active completion capacity
- Frac Job Count → actual completion output
This combination allows for more accurate forecasting of oil and gas production, service demand, and basin-level activity trends.
- Rig count increases ->
- Wells are drilled ->
- Frac spreads increase ->
- Frac jobs increase ->
- Production rises
However, timing gaps between each step can create disconnects in traditional analysis.
Understanding these differences is critical for:
Relying on a single metric can lead to incomplete or misleading conclusions.
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