Black Raven Energy Gets 80 Percent Working Interest in Colorado’s DJ Basin

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Black Raven Energy, Inc., which is currently a private company, recently said it acquired an 80 percent working interest in Morgan County, Colorado's Adena Field.

According to a release, the agreement involves 18,760 gross acres in the field, which cost the Denver-based company $15.75 million. The location is in the Denver-Julesburg (DJ) Basin.

Black Raven Energy believes that between the D sand and the J sand present in the Adena Field, there are 3 million barrels of oil associated with the field. The Adena Field has produced 75 million barrels of oil from J sand since it was discovered in 1953, according to the release.

Thomas E. Riley, Black Raven Energy's 58-year-old chief executive, said that the company believes there are a great deal of opportunities presented by the purchase.

"We are very pleased to complete this acquisition," he said. "We have been working on this for several months, and have been very pleasantly surprised at the wealth of opportunities presented by this acquisition. For a small company with a great technical staff, this field will provide growth in oil and natural gas production for the foreseeable future."

According to Bloomberg, Black Raven Energy was founded in 2003 and currently has six employees.

SM Energy’s Second Quarter Income Surges Amid Increased Production

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Second quarter income for SM Energy Co. (SM:NYSE) was up significantly compared to both the same period in 2010 and the first three months of this year.

The Denver-based company reported income for 2011's second quarter at $124.5 million. This number is compared to $18.1 million in reported income over the second quarter in 2010 and the $18.5 million loss in the first quarter of this year, reports UpstreamOnline.

In addition, SM Energy's operating revenue for the second quarter was $377.87 million, up more than $150 million from the second quarter of 2010.

One of the reasons for this strong quarter was likely a drastic increase in production. According to the news source, the company produced an average of 89,820 barrels of oil per day (bpd), compared to 56,810 in the same months of last year.

TheStreet reports that SM Energy's stocks rose more than $8 per share between the close on Monday and Tuesday's opening. TheStreet Ratings still has SM as a "hold." The news source says that while the company has strong revenue growth it is also dealing with a number of weaknesses such as poor debt management.

Rowan’s Second Quarter Profits Fall, in Part Due to Delays

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Rowan Companies, Inc. (RDC:NYSE) recently announced that its second quarter income declined considerably compared to the same period last year.

In the three months ending June 30, Rowan created a net income of $44.4 million or $0.35 per share, according to a release. This was a significant drop off from the $83.4 million ($0.73 per share) generated over the same three months in 2010.

Matt Ralls, the company's president and chief executive, said that a number of factors impacted income in the second quarter.

"Our financial performance during the second quarter was significantly impacted by the effects of rig start-ups, several of which have occurred or will occur later than we expected due largely to delays related to more rigorous customer acceptance tests and regulatory approval processes and civil unrest in the Middle East," he said.

RTT News reports that Rowan's per share income was right in line with predictions of 20 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.

Reuters reports that Rowan's stocks hit a 52-week high at $44.83 per share, with a low over that same period at $24.36.

Black Diamond Group: Stock Valuation & Analyst Ratings

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Today we conclude guest writer Michel Massaad’s profile on Black Diamond Group — an energy services company enjoying fast growth and a steady and growing dividend… with exposure to the entire resource sector.

Black Diamond Group’s Business Segment # 2: Work Force Accommodations (Camps & Logistics)

Black Diamond’s Work Force Accommodations division can be easily described in 2 words: “remote camps” – bunkhouses, kitchens, recreational centers etc. in the middle of nowhere. Except for a small presence in Alaska, almost all of the business is centered in Western Canada. Because the company is still young (5-6 years old) most of the equipment is virtually brand new with an average age of less than 3 years old – which means they have a lot of modern amenities. Operating a newer fleet with those amenities is definitely a plus when you’re bidding against your competitors.

BDI’s modular buildings can provide workforce housing for 50-2,000 people. Each camp is formed with modular structures assembled to form large dormitories, kitchen/dining facilities and recreation complexes which the company usually owns and operates. These camps are usually leased but they can be sold at the request of the customer. The structures are designed and built with Canada’s northern climate in mind.

In addition to leasing portable modular structures, Black Diamond offers complete turnkey solutions by supporting a customer’s project through planning, permitting, site engineering & design, transportation, logistics, installation, site services and ongoing camp maintenance programs.

Black Diamond Group Modular Buildings

The division’s fleet grew by +15% (+205 units) in the first quarter of this year and accounted for 57% of gross revenue for the quarter. The majority of this growth was the addition of camp assets in the Horn River area of Northern British Columbia and for a remote mining project.

The utilization of these fleet assets was strong throughout the period averaging 97% compared with 86% for the same period in 2010. These numbers should not come as a surprise at all as the company successfully built a meaningful workforce accommodations revenue from oil sands, shale plays, mining, forestry and major construction projectsas well as conventional oil and gas operations.

Current estimates show 10,000 to 15,000 new beds needed in the WCSB in the next 24 months. The company is anticipating additional capital requirements deployed on several projects in the oil sands areas of Alberta accelerating demand for accommodation over the course of the next 12 months. In fact, investments in Alberta’s oil sands are forecasted to hit $15 billion dollars this year (+$2 billion more than 2010) but total spending in the oil sands sector is expected to reach $180 billion over the next decade according to a report by Peters & Co — thanks in part to an increased interest by deep pocketed foreign investors.

With increased capital spending comes an increase in remote housing demand for personnel which fuels the growth of Black Diamond’s workforce accommodations division as new contracts are signed with an average term of 36 months. The Workforce Accommodation units typically do not experience significant seasonality due to the longer term nature of the contracts on projects requiring larger complements of labor in remote areas, which tend to start and operate without regard to the time of year. The time to recover capital costs is currently 3 – 3.5 years.

Out of the 3 business segments that profit from the boom in resources, this is the division that stands to shine. Competition for labor is intense and with the tightening of the labor market, companies are going the extra mile in order to keep a low employee turnover rate. For large E&Ps, the biggest cost is labor so it’s in their interest to avoid extra costs related to replacing an employee. Companies are requesting customized modules in order to mitigate the turnover costs. Offering better food quarters and higher quality equipment/services (internet, TV) are part of the effort for successful workforce retention.

This brings us to how Black Diamond spends its capital. There’s no such thing as speculative spending in anticipation of future contracts. BDI doesn’t buy any new equipment until a new contract is signed.

Business Segment # 3: Space Rentals (BOXX Modular)

The Space Rentals division is essentially focused on providing portable and modular buildings for workspace and storage versus the remote lodging facilities that is provided by the Workforce Accommodations segment.

BDI’s BOXX Modular buildings are typically designed for urban and industrial customers. They can be found on refinery sites, construction sites or even in public events providing workspace and mobile storage. Most of the equipment is not industry-specific which means deployments can be easily customized to deliver success on large and small projects in infrastructure, mining, energy, forestry, construction, as well as for the arts, athletics and the public sector.

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The asset fleet includes offices, lunchrooms, lavatories, portable storage and multi-unit complexes. The company also rents ancillary items like furniture and office equipment.

Business is geographically diversified covering western Canadian provinces, Ontario and the US. BOXX Modular might be contributing to the success of a golf tournament in Edmonton by providing temporary portable offices while other modules are deployed in parallel on several long term US public sector contracts. Almost 50% of the Space rental’s fleet assets are in the US.

 

Black Diamond Group Space Rentals

Increasing economic activity in North America will push utilization rates and rental rates higher in both Canada and the US as infrastructure projects take off: Bridges, roads, buildings, utilities, public facilities as well as pipelines are expected to be newly built, repaired or updated. In the first quarter of 2011 the, the Space Rentals fleet grew by 3% (+82 units) while the utilization rate increased to 74% up from 69% last year.

The company expects a positive year over year results throughout 2011 in this division as the global economic recovery takes hold. However, if we do double dip because of the debt drama, rental rates will experience downward pressure and results will be impacted in the long run. As of March 31, the average contract in this division has 7 months remaining in Canada and 13 months remaining in the US.

Stock Valuation

The market likes BDI which explains why it is currently trading at 7.9x P/CF above its group average at 7.0x. The multiple would probably be higher if retail investors had more access to more shares as the stock is not very liquid. With 50% of the stock held by large institutions and 17% held by management only 33% of the float is accessible to the retail investor.

A stock split would certainly improve the liquidity of the stock pushing the price higher but as far as we know the company has not decided yet if such an action will be taken. (This has proven to be very positive for Canadian Energy Services, another OGIB stock pick that split 3:1 and is up almost 20% in the month following.)

The company recently closed a private placement of $62 million in long-term debt in the form of senior secured notes with an interest rate of 5.44% due in 2019.The financing should help reduce outstanding debt (currently at $104 million) and leaves the company with increased financial flexibility (upwards of $125 million in credit facilities by the end of 2011) to fund growth or acquisition opportunities.


WHAT THE ANALYSTS SAY

Firm / Target Price:
Raymond James –  $34.00 up from $31 following Q1 results
CIBC World Markets – $36.00 up from $32.50 following Q1 results
GMP –  $33.50 as of May 31 2011
Peters & Co. – $35.00 up from $28.00 following Q1 results
BMO –  $35.00

CONCLUSION

Black Diamond Group lacks the sex appeal of an oil and gas producer that owns a large contiguous land base in a hot emerging resource play — but you have to admit its stock has easily outperformed many of these juniors this year. Even though it’s not an exciting business, you will get exposed to the whole resources sector without the commodity price volatility and rewarded with a dividend on top of it.

Black Diamond’s competitive edge has nothing to do with patents; it comes down to relationships with customers. Lead by an experienced management team and armed with newer equipment relative to the competition, BDI has been successful in capturing one contract after another and has walked the extra mile by weaving strategic partnerships with First Nation bands for long term mutual benefits.

The stock is trading near its yearly high but with strong growth opportunities ahead in the resources sector, the company is positioned to grow significantly in the next 12-18 months with the vast spending in Alberta’s oilsands and new shale plays in North America.

– Michel Massaad
Editor, BeatingTheIndex.com

(Click here to review Black Diamond Group, Part 1.)

Southwestern Energy Looks Into Brown Dense Formation in Arkansas, Louisiana

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Southwestern Energy Co. (SWN:NYSE) recently announced that it now holds 460,000 net acres near the Arkansas-Louisiana border in Upper Jurassic Lower Smackover Brown Dense limestone.

The Houston-based company said that it anticipates that it would start its first horizontal well in late in this year's third quarter. This well will be located in Columbia County, Arkansas, east of the Dorcheat-Macedonia oil field, according to the Oil & Gas Journal.

Southwestern said that extensive research went into the play, which the news source described as "unconventional."

"We extensively reviewed the Brown Dense across the region and have indications that the right mix of reservoir depth, thickness, porosity, matrix permeability, sealing formations, thermal maturity, and oil characteristics are found in the area of southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana," said the company. "This region of Arkansas and Louisiana has produced oil and gas from the Upper Smackover since the 1920s. The Brown Dense formation is the source rock for these Upper Smackover fields."

The company has reportedly put about $150 million into undeveloped acreage.

According to Reuters, SWN's stocks hit a 52-week high at $49.25 and its low over that same period was $30.61.

Murphy Oil sells Wisconsin refinery to Calumet

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Murphy Oil Corp. (MUR:NYSE) recently agreed to sell a Wisconsin refinery to Calumet Specialty Products Partners (CLMT:NASDAQ).

The Indianapolis-based Calumet paid $214 million for the 33,250-b/cd facility, which is located in Superior, according to the Oil & Gas Journal. In addition, the sales price includes the value of hydrocarbon inventory, which was valued at $260 million on June 30.

The news source reports that the El Dorado, Arkansas-based Murphy is hoping to sell a number of other refineries as well. These reportedly include its 125,000-b/cd refinery in Meraux, Louisiana and a 106,000-b/cd in Milford Haven, Wales.

Murphy Oil is reportedly planning to concentrate on exploration and production, in addition to retailing in the United States.

According to MarketWatch, the 52-week high of Murphy's oil stock was $78.16. Its low over that same period was $52.80. It is currently trading at $64.26 and rising.

Personnel with Calumet said that the acquisition will increase the company's throughput capacity by 50 percent, reports the Oil & Gas Journal.

Suncor says bitumen production begins for Firebag Stage 3

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Suncor Energy Inc. (SU:NYSE) recently announced that it began its initial bitumen production associated with its Firebag Stage 3 steam-assisted gravity drainage project in the early part of July.

The company said that by the end of the third quarter it also hopes to begin steam injection into two well pads as part of the project in the northern part of Alberta, according to the Oil & Gas Journal.

Facilities, central plant and infrastructure are under construction as part of Stage 4, in addition to two well pads.

Suncor said that it believes production from Stage 4 will start in the latter of half of the first quarter of 2013.

The energy company said that its net earnings in the second quarter of 2011 were $562 million, up from $540 million from the same period the year before.

Rick George, president and chief executive officer, said that he anticipates a strong second half from his company.

"With major maintenance at our oil sands operations successfully behind us, we're looking toward a strong second half to the year and steady production through 2012," he said in a release.

Reuters reports that Suncor's 52-week high was $48.53, compared to its 52-week low of $29.15. 

Chesapeake has high hopes for Ohio Utica Shale

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The second quarter financials for Chesapeake Energy (CHK:NYSE) confirmed that the company believes that the Ohio Utica Shale, which is liquids rich, will be viable economically.

Nine vertical and six horizontal wells drilled in the shale showed successful results, according to the Oil & Gas Financial Journal.

The news source reports that Chesapeake believes that its "industry-leading 1.25 million net leasehold acres in the Utica Shale play could be worth $15 – $20 billion in increased value to the company." Baird Equity Research analysts said that such result in an implied acreage valuation of between $12,500 and $16,667 for each acre.

Chesapeake said that it believes that the Utica Shale "will be characterized by a western oil phase, a central wet gas phase and an eastern dry gas phase and is likely most analogous, but economically superior to, the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas."

The Associated Press reports that Chesapeake's financials showed earnings of 76 cents per share. Prompting Robert Morris of Citi Investment Research to raise its price target from $35 to $38.