Investing in the Paris Basin Shale Oil Play

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10x Bigger than the Bakken

The Paris Basin shale oil play in France has the potential to be ten times the size of the Bakken play in North America, and some high profile exploration is beginning soon.

Estimates range from just a few to many tens of billions of barrels of oil in the Paris Basin.  Much like the North American shale plays, these formations have been drilled through many times – there are over 1000 wells drilled into the Basin – so exploration risk is low.  It’s completion risk – how to best unlock the oil from the rock – that is the main risk.

So there is a lot of data, which makes exploration much less risky.  It also means that local residents are used to having oil wells drilled in the region – unlike New York State ;).

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Activity by explorers in this part of France has been growing, and is now hitting a fever pitch.  A huge land race is underway, with applications for more than 1.6 million acres pending approval for several companies, including Toreador Resources (TRGL-NASD) in the US, Vermillion Energy (VET.UN-TSX) and Realm Energy (RLM-TSXv) in Canada.

Exploration – real drilling – in the Paris Basin will ramp up this fall.  Toreador Resources Corporation is the purest play. In May they announced an exploration deal with Hess Corporation (HES-NYSE) that could be worth as much as $265 million for 50% of Toreador’s 600,000 acres in the play.  They spud their first well into the play in Q4 2010. It will be one of the most watched wells in the world.

Canada’s Vermilion Energy has also acquired acreage in the play and begun exploration activities.  Vermilion is already recognized as France’s largest oil producer.

Craig Steinke, Executive Chairman for Realm Energy, says “The Paris Basin is arguably the most exciting shale play in Europe right now.  We expect to acquire a good-sized position in this play.”

As I wrote about earlier, many of the European shale gas plays are being bought up by the majors, there are intermediate and junior producers in the game, which should keep news flow on the play steady for retail investors.

When this happened in North America, there was huge wealth creation as the juniors and intermediates were small enough that their stocks could benefit from a productive land position.

Like the big North American shale oil plays that enriched investors, the Paris Basin has big reserve potential, good existing well data, and a local population that’s familiar with drilling.

Hopefully, history will repeat itself.

*Keith Schaefer owns  Toreador

Canada’s Natural Gas Takeover Targets

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Could low natural gas prices be setting up a new profit opportunity in Canada?

Canadian brokerage firm GMP Securities says low prices could be the catalyst for a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the Canadian oilpatch.

In a September 7 report, GMP likens the current pricing environment to 1998-2001, when “the intermediate producer group was virtually eliminated through over $50 billion in transactions during that timeframe. One of the catalysts behind this massive consolidation was large caps/supermajors positioning early in advance of an increasing natural gas price environment.

With a similar pricing scenario today and initial deals already occurring, we believe history could be on the verge of repeating itself over the next 12 – 18 months.” They go on to say that with over $70 billion in transactions in US natural gas plays, Canada could be next.

How to Invest in Oil & Gas Stocks – Part 1

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Investing in oil and gas stocks is actually quite simple, even if you don’t know anything about the energy industry. (My friends in Calgary would say I am living proof of that.)

From my experience in speaking with management teams and reading research reports, I’ve put together a basic information list for retail investors doing initial research into oil & gas companies.  It’s not exhaustive, but the answers should provide the basic information to decide if you want to do more due diligence.

Either call management, or go to the company’s website and look at its corporate presentation. The Top 10 bits of information I want to find out initially is:

  1. How many barrels of oil per day (bopd, or “boe” for natural gas – barrels of oil equivalent) is the company producing, and how quickly have they grown production in each of the last 3 quarters. 

Exxon’s Chart Says Oil is About to Move

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I have been actively buying and selling in the portfolio last week, and informing subscribers of new investment ideas has kept me away from the blog more than usual.  But a chart I follow caught my attention this weekend and I think it could help investors determine the next move in the global oil price.

I keep waiting for the 3 year chart on Exxon Mobil (XOM-NYSE) to break out or break down.  I have been following it since I started my blog earlier this year.  I noticed that oil bad become the market’s favourite derivative on the overall market, and I think that continues today.  At times, the market moves the global oil price; at other times oil moves the market.  Their relationship changes, but investors are definitely linking them.

And if equities lead commodity pricing, then should be XOM one of the bellwether stocks that investors should follow.  However, it has NOT benefited from the run up in the NYSE this year.  In fact, it has been strangely silent on forecasting market direction or oil price direction for the last six months.  But its 3 year chart tells me that is about to change. 

XOM 3 yr chart Sep 18 09

This Week’s Natural Gas Rally – Buy or Sell?

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After almost 30 days of trading almost straight down, natural gas rallied up 30% this week – could this be the REAL rally investors have been hoping for, or is it another headfake?

Unfortunately, I believe that the type of big moves we saw in natural gas price this week is indicative of bear market short covering rallies more than anything.    The October 2009 contract for natural gas in the US was US$2.51/mcf last Friday, and today (Fri Sept 11) it closed at $3.25/mcf.  Canadian natural gas (Sept contract) priced at AECO jumped from CAD$2.25 – $3/mcf from last Friday to today.

And several natural gas several stocks had great runs. As equities do, they started pricing in this week’s run in natural gas a few days early – last Friday. Vero Energy* (VRO-TSX), which has more analysts covering it than any other junior gas producer on the TSX, jumped from $3 – $4.43 this week before settling at $4.04.  (It has the best jumps on the bear rallies!)

Many other gas stocks were up 20-30%, including the debt-free natural gas producer that I alerted my subscribers to in my most recent issue.

Substitute the word “oil” for “gold” in this article

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Ambrose Evans Pritchard is the international business editor for The Telegraph newspaper in London, England. His recent article on China and gold echo my own thoughts on China and oil.  In fact, if you substitute the word oil for gold here, you will see why the price of oil can stay very high in relation to market fundamentals.

 

http://tinyurl.com/n3nvrs

Another Natural Gas Bull Sticks His Neck Out; Natgas Stock for 4th Issue

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I was focused on writing the 4th issue for subscribers, due out the second week of September, but I came across a research article I wanted to share with readers.

Martin King, an energy analyst at First Energy in Calgary is the latest to trot out the “it’s-darkest-before-the-dawn-buy-natural-gas-stocks-now” theme, in a 5 page note on August 31.  I’ll tell you about his key points in a minute.

But first, I want to say this guy has a track record that I follow.  Back on February 19 of this year, he put out a similar research note on natural gas stocks that was uncannily accurate. Just like now, sentiment for natural gas stocks was very low, and he stuck his neck out saying it’s time to be a contrarian and buy.

And natural gas stocks did have a strong spring – much stronger than I anticipated.  Investors following Mr. King’s thesis made good money through the spring, as the Amex Natural Gas Index went from 300 to 480 over the next 3 months, and Canadian natural gas stocks bottomed within 10-14 days of his call, and had a great spring.  Both the index and many stocks jumped 50% or more in the next 3 months.

So this man has my attention.  I am now going to introduce a natural gas stock to subscribers in my next issue.

Natural Gas Prices Are Relatively Cheap, But Natural Gas Stocks are Relatively Expensive

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I subscribe to Steve Saville’s “The Speculative Investor” (www.speculative-investor.com) and find his twice weekly column very interesting.  He has given me permission to share this last weekend’s article on natural gas and natural gas stocks, which mirrored my thinking almost exactly.

After reading this article, please go check out his site.  He is based in Asia.  He covers stocks from all resource sectors, mostly juniors, and I find his macro overview to be very interesting.

By Steve Saville,

originally published as part of his Weekly Market Update for the Week Commencing 24th August 2009

The following three charts tell an interesting story.

The first chart shows that the oil/natgas ratio (the price of oil relative to the price of natural gas) hit a new multi-year high — and perhaps a new all-time high — last Friday. The ratio would be around 6 if oil and natgas were trading at their energy-equivalent levels, so with the ratio near its current level of 22 it means that oil is effectively trading at a 250% premium to natural gas.

When markets move way beyond rational valuations and stay there for a prolonged period, people will become accustomed to the new valuation level and explanations will emerge as to why the new valuation really does make sense. However, a while later it will be discovered that the new valuation was as nonsensical as it originally appeared.