How Many Beers Needed To Believe Tesla?

0

tesla

INTRODUCTION

Short Tesla (TSLA-NASD: $250).  Target Price = $12.  Twelve Dollars.  That would be a 95% drop from its share price today.  There is a lot of emotion and hype around the company and stock right now, with its cheap electric car model, the Tesla 3, getting banner headlines every day on surging sales.

But Nathan Weiss, an institutional newsletter writer out of Rhode Island, runs the unit economics on the production costs of Tesla–and finds the stock wanting.  He presented his vews at our Toronto Subscriber Investment Summit.  The entire transcript of his speech is below, or you can click on the video.

He customized his powerpoint for Canada, showing–every few slides–how much beer investors would have to drink to believe each successive claim by Tesla management.

I subscribe to Nathan’s service, and his ideas over the years have made me and my OGIB subscribers more money than anyone–especially in ethanol stocks in 2013-2014.  His research and analytical skills are second to none.  The timing here could hardly be better to understand why investors should short Tesla.

As you can see we’re probably negative predisposed to Tesla Motors, this actually shows a recent fire of a car charging a (inaudible). We do like lithium and we’ll talk about it in the presentation.

A couple of quick disclaimers, this is for information only and not for investment advice, we may change our mind tomorrowplease don’t sue us.

A little bit about my background. We’re a Rhode Island based independent research firm and we try to come up with ideas and themes that we then write about and sell to our clients, which are primarily hedge funds. We just follow a few stocks at a time and we try to know them very well. We recently published a 99 page re-initiation report on Tesla Motors. We limit ourselves to 30 clients.

Today we’re going to talk about Tesla Motors and specifically some more of the controversial things surrounding the company, as well as a little bit of insight into what we do as a research process on a stock. We’re going to talk about the credibility, environmental aspects, subsidies, Tesla’s Giga Factory which is their largest lithium ion battery plant. The Model S and orders backlog and some of the financials and economics.

From the consumers point of view the Model S is a great car. Most controversial stocks and companies have a great product and it’s actually the numbers behind it that are troubling. I personally love Krispy Kreme donuts and the company went bankrupt.

So from the consumer’s point of view the Model S is a cutting edge car with a really cool UB. It’s green, it’s sexy, very high performance and the fastest models are sub 4 seconds, 0 to 60 and been billed as the safest car in America by Tesla and it’s just plain cool. People stop and take pictures and want to ride in one and it’s a really cool product.

From a stock analyst point of view…so the bullish analysts will tell you the production constraints they have more orders than they possibly can deliver, they have industry leading 25% gross margin, they’re profitable on a non GAAP basis and if you move some numbers around you can make money. There is a sustainable cost advantage and they’ll do 500,000 deliveries in 2020 up from 50,000 deliveries last year.

The bearish analysts will tell you they have zero credibility, an unreliable product, aggressive accounting and a couple use a stronger word but…heavily subsidized and they lose thousands of dollars on every car.

So if we quickly look at Tesla’s current products on the upper left we see the Model S and it’s generally $70 to $140,000 US dollar car and the average is around $92,000. As you see on the right, it’s got a massive 17” touch screen which other auto makers have been hesitant to put in for liability reasons.

They introduced the auto pilot which is basically their self driving highway mode where they can follow the lane and set the cruise control and follow the cars and kind of drive itself on the highway…again before most States are allowing it to happen.

They have auto extending handles, touch door handles and to date they’ve done 107,000 deliveries and again 50,000 last year.

The newest product they introduced on September 29th last year is the Model X SUV. The initial model came out at $137,000, which was a pretty negative surprise. Investors and buyers thought it would be about a $90,000 car. They are promising that some of the next models are being priced at about $112,000 US with a pretty good set of options.

It’s got a lot of the same features as the Model S except it has Go Wing doors, electromechanical doors that open themselves and look really cool. It has auto pilot and a windshield that actually extends over the driver’s head to compensate because of lack of sun roof because of the falcon wing doors.

They shipped just over 200 of them in the 4th quarter and we think they’re about at 2,000 deliveries today.
Then the power side of the business and given their expertise and seeing the amount of market and utility demand that they’ve got in the power business as well, they’re producing a 200 pound lithium ion battery that goes into the wall.

It’s really aggressively priced at around $3,500 or sells at $3,000 but by the time they actually install it and include the inverter and everything it’s about $7,000. So it turns out Tesla wasn’t actually as cost competitive as they thought, but that was their entry into a really rapidly growing market.

One of the first things we’re going to discuss is whether Tesla’s management team is credible. If you believe they are then you probably want this, this and this. It takes about 4 to 5 beers to think about Tesla being credible.

management tesla
So one of the first things we do when we’re looking at a company, whether it’s me or one of my analysts, I tell them to go back and look at the last few years. What happened? There are some things with permits or energy or commodity prices that’s outside the company’s control and we don’t fault management for having as bad a guidance as everybody else on that.

But there are things that are under their control. In terms of raising capital which is clearly under Tesla’s control; there have been multiple instances, 2 of the most egregious on this slide where in 2013 they promised they didn’t have any plans to raise capital right now and we spent no time on that at all and 7 days later they raised $230 million in equity and $450 million convert.

They did the same thing in August and the CFO implied on a conference call that we’re comfortable with our cash levels and 9 days later they did an equity offering that was up sized to $785 million.

They’ve done similar things in production. They’ve got a Roadster production and the time tables have been delayed. They originally said they’d build 650 Roadsters in ’08 and they built 140. The bottom bullet point, they actually missed every year’s delivery except for 2013 in terms of their initial guidance.

And the bottom of the slide shows the Model X which we showed a couple slides previously was originally to come out at the end of 2014 and came out late in 2015. At the time in late 2013 they said they were at the final brush scopes of the design and completely ended up revamping the front end and making major changes in mid 2015.

Lastly on the delivery guidance they made some ridiculous financial statements. The first one in May 2010 they said they weren’t profitable because they had Model S expenses when developing the vehicle. They did $20 million in revenue and almost $4 million of gross profit but then had $16 million of SG&A.

One of the things that I think is really important what management says on a call or conference they’re not really held accountable. If you put something in a SEC or government filing that’s actually important, it’s on the record and reviewed by lawyers.

They had guided in early 2015 that they were going to hit a 30% gross margin and deliver cars at a 100,000 vehicle annual rate at the end of 2014. They delivered 17,000 cars at a 22% gross margin, arguably we think the actual car’s gross margin is only 17%.

Is the Model S green? A lot of these things are particular to Tesla but it doesn’t mean all EV’s aren’t green but if you believe the Model S is then you probably need a few beers.

On Tesla’s website they calculate the effective CO2 emissions of the Model S sedan are about 176 grams per mile driven and that compares to a small gasoline car at 240/280 and the Jeep Grand Cherokee at 440.So when you go into EIA’s data and start to actually verify the claim there is about 572 grams of CO2 emitted nationwide in the US when you include the 7% transmission loss on average from power plant to customer.

When you multiply that by miles driven the average efficiency we get about 216 grams of CO2 per mile. That’s not bad and a little higher than what Tesla stated but pretty efficient.

However, lithium ion batteries are inefficient when they charge and you get about a 15% charging loss partially because of heat generation and then just the chemical reactions that take place. So when you add that on top of it you end up getting 255 grams per mile so it’s kind of in the range of a small passenger car.

Taking that a little further, the Model S in particular uses a lot of power when it’s idle. So they’ve taken the role of using over 7,000 small lithium ion battery cells that they then actively circulate coolant through to warm and cool it even when the car isn’t being driven.

It monitors the temperature and there’s tons of fire detection and fire suppression equipment on board. Those total units of consumption of that monitoring and temperature compensation system is about 3 ½ kilowatt hours per day more than a small refrigerator. When you divide that out over miles driven that adds another 61 grams per mile for your effective CO2 emissions and that gets us up to 316 grams.

And in the constructional lithium batteries themselves is very CO2 intensive, over 100,000 mile battery life that adds another 153 grams per mile of effective CO2 emissions and we’re not even including things like the car actually weighs over 4,000 pounds, has aluminum fenders and so it’s a very energy intensive car to build.

So we think the total effect of emissions is about 469 grams a mile, which if we go back to our Jeep Grand Cherokee is actually more than that at 443 for the Jeep Grand Cherokee.

Other emissions matter and so Nitrogen Oxides are perceived a lot (10:10 audio skips) after the Volkswagen scandal. The EPA reports it’s about .508 grams of NOX emissions per kilowatt generated by the US grid.

Based on our previous driving efficiency and power consumption calculations the Model S emits about .27 grams a mile and that’s up against the EPA’s Tier 2 standard you’re past your vehicle mile limit of .05 grams per mile.

Sulphur dioxide is also similar but roughly where it’s given approximately 30% of the US power grid’s pull you end up with sulphur dioxide emissions of about 182 times the gas powered automobile. So 20,000 Model S’s in the US emit the same sulphur dioxide as 3.6 million passenger vehicles, gas powered.

If you look at the bottom the Volkswagen Passat diesel which is one of the cars being recalled emitted .25 grams a mile of NOX, so Volkswagen took a $17 billion recall position and facing EPA fines up to $37,500 per car. The Model S we calculated emits .278 so a little bit higher and Tesla has received a $7,500 Federal tax credit, $2,500 State credit and other auto makers including Volkswagen have been forced to pay a total of $412 million in zero emission credits from Tesla.

Should Tesla be subsidized? Probably not.

I always like to use the Amtrak example here and in the US Amtrak is constantly cited as a big wasteful bloated organization losing hundreds of thousands a mile. Newspapers have gone as far as to say on some of the longer routes it would be cheaper to buy the passenger airline tickets and shutting down Amtrak. It would be lower costs.

So every year Amtrak gets drug before Congress and they testify why we need it and begrudgingly end up getting funded. The most recent fiscal year is a $289 million operating budget funding.

For 2016, we estimate and it’s actually below consensus but we estimate 35,600 Tesla vehicles will be sold in the US and for that the Federal tax credits will total $267 million, almost equal to Amtrak’s subsidy and also about $2 per household and so everybody in the US has paid a couple of bucks for the Model S over the year.

In addition, we mentioned those greenhouse gas EVD credits and so various States, particularly California, require that a certain percentage of your vehicle fleet be 0 tailpipe emissions and if you don’t hit that you have to buy credits from other auto makers. To date Tesla has received a total of $583 million credit revenue from other auto makers.

They’ve also received other nice tax subsidies such as a $1.2 billion incentive package from the State of Nevada for floating their Giga Factory. From the State of California they get a lot of tax exemptions and accelerated depreciation write off and the like.

Is the Model S reliable? We think you have to drink a lot to believe the Model S is reliable.

It doesn’t mean people don’t love the car still and people endured some incredible reliability issues and still had raving reviews about the company.  But if you look at some of the independent road tests that have been done CNN did a road test where the touch screen and the door handles refused to work and they had to call Tesla and have them send an update.

Consumer Reports initially gave the Model S a 99 rating tying the top rating of a Lexus that they ever gave and recommended to buy it. that said as they drove the car at 15,000 miles the article said they had more than their fair share of problems, including door handle problems, a blank center console, a seat belt buckle that broke, all types of noises and they replaced the 3rd row seats, a 12 volt battery, the HVAC filter and the power train coolant light.

They actually took Tesla off the recommended list and saying the 2015 model had lower quality than the previous years.
Edmund’s was even worse. In February 2013 they plunked down $105,000 for a top of the line performance version of the Model S85. They were going to do a $20,000 road test which they then extended over 30,000 miles.

In the first year of ownership the touch screen had to get replaced, the sunroof leaked, rear tires wore out prematurely which is a common problem and importantly they actually had 2 driving unit replacements which in the Model S the main battery assembly the motor, inverter and transmission effectively a 1 gear transmission all get replaced in a single unit.

They actually had a 3rd replacement at 30,000 miles on the odometer as well as right height sensor, motor mount.
Their summary was the car has 30,000 miles on it and hasn’t been out of service for 30 days. In the wrap up review, which is still available online they reported 28 total issues.

Much like Consumer Reports there is an organization called True Delta which tracks actual repair visits from repair centers and they show here the ranking of US auto makers with models available in the US and the brackets beside the names is how many cars are available by that auto maker and so Tesla shows 2 cars available. They actually rank as the least reliable car in America.

Then Plug In America which is an interesting group and it actually is a Pro EV group. It’s transformed into a California non-profit and they are quite a large organization now where EV owners submit repair data and efficiency data and form a general community about all their respective EV’s and not just Tesla but it’s for all plug in vehicles.

With the idea that they can also help promote electric cars and have some really cool data.

They show in their data set much like we’ve seen in Tesla forums a lot of driving unit replacements. So when we were looking through the forums one of the things…we go through forums not to get anecdotal information but try to gather hard data out of forums. It’s really time intensive but with the right effort sometimes you can get some really cool conclusions. So we found between 30 and 40% of Model S owners had a driving unit replacement.

Based on the Plug In America data 77% of cars over 50,000 miles had a driving unit replacement. And 13 out of 14 in the data set with over 65,000 miles had 1 or more driving unit replacements. And we categorize the data and break it up by year and mileage, so the way you read this at 25,000 miles 27% of the 2012’s had a driving unit replacement, 23% of the 2013’s and 23% of the 2014’s. The 2015’s are still too new to have that many cars in the data set with over 25,000 miles but there is a large number that are at 10,000 miles now and look to be moving in track with previous years.

The Giga Factory which is Tesla’s lithium ion battery production center is unprecedented. So EV critics pointed out a couple of years ago that Tesla’s plan to sell 20,000 EV’s in 2020 would require more than 100% of 2013’s lithium ion battery output for cells, the types you use in laptops and power electronics.

This is actually one of the interesting things about the lithium market what with Tesla’s skeptics if you look at global lithium vehicle deliveries they will grow by more than 500,000 units between now and 2020. That growth will exceed everything put into consumer electronics today. So we are actually very positive lithium and positive lithium demand. We’ve recently seen some pricing quotes that lithium is trading at 13,000 in China.

This is what Tesla promised. It’s a massive Giga Factory, the largest building in the world and a $5 billion production center. Then there were a couple of little news articles and the union that was actually working on it said the project was cut back 80%. The CO of Tesla said it was a test project. This is a recent drone photo of what’s being built.

Are they production constrained? One of the main cases is they have more orders than they can deliver today and they can produce whatever they want and no worries about backlogs. That’s even a little harder to believe.

It’s a busy slide but what we do is go through forums and find online posts from groups like Plug In America where people ordered their car and in the good old days 2 years ago Tesla used to provide sequential production numbers.

If I ordered a Model S I might get production number 13,001 and Keith orders 2 of them and he gets 13,002 and 13,003, etc. and so it was really easy to track orders.  They’ve since muddied the water and give unsequential numbers and skip thousands at a time. They do whatever they can to hide it, which to me is a very good sign they don’t want you to know something.

So when we go through their data we suggest they’ve actually been burning down backlog and we think they only have a 2,000 vehicle Model S backlog. Putting that graphic here which is a much more fun way to look at it this table shows that the red vertical bars are individual order clusters and the height represents the number of days from the time you order your Model S to the time it’s delivered.

One thing we do know with relative certainty is how many Model S’s are being produced each week. They frequently do conferences, trade shows and presentations where they talk about their current weekly production rate so we can track that pretty well.

You can see in the order cluster, so right around the middle of the chart was 2014 when they introduced all wheel drive and auto pilot. More recently production has been flattened by a low priced Model S70 and so a smaller battery but a really aggressive $70,000 price point.

And the black line shows how many days on average between the order and start of production which has been hovering around 10 to 25 days recently. So with current production rates for the Model S cars around 1,000 per week that indicates a couple thousand cars in backlog.

With the Model X they still provide sequential model numbers so we know up until September 30th anyway, we know at a hard and fast basis they have about 31,000 orders. They quit giving order guidance and quit sequential reservation numbers so they’re intentionally trying to muddy the water now that they’re in production.

The other thing is generally a company with more demand than supply raises prices and does things like cut back on SG&A and Tesla has kind of done the opposite. If you look at and in Canada you guys get a pretty good deal but in the US the dollar price of a Model S has gone from $99,000 on the far right in late 2013 for a fully loaded car to $84,000 today.

In Canadian dollars you’ve actually seen the price has gone from $104,000 Canadian to $110,000 despite the massive move in the currency. So they’re introducing a new lower price Model S.

The question is can they sell 400,000 cars a year and will that solve all their financial problems? I think that one speaks for itself.

So we’ve seen that people have been nice enough when they go through Tesla tours to take pictures even though they’re told not to. This is what we think the Model 3 looks like and that was actually a clay model seen in Tesla’s facility. It’s supposed to be a $35,000 car that does 200 miles per charge. They claim it’s going to be 400,000 in annual deliveries.

If you look at their competitors today which is the Nissan Leaf which is sort of a boxy, hopefully no one takes offense, but kind of a boxy little car and they sell 44,000 copies globally. The I3 which I’m actually a big fan of and is a cool little car that gets a battery bump this summer and goes up to 120 mile range and also has a gas engine on board to back it up. It does 28,000 cars a year.

Is Tesla profitable? No.

So the far left column shows Tesla Motors financials as the report it compared to Ford and GM and we also threw in Renault and Volkswagen. So Tesla claims in their financials that they show a 25.5% gross margin compared to 11 to 15% for other auto makers.

Within that they also showed almost 22% SG&A and so their sales and overhead are incredibly high compared to 7 to 10% for Volkswagen.

So what’s going on? GM, Ford and pretty much every other auto maker the manufacturer sells the car to an independent dealer at about a 10% discount to MSRP and the dealer bears the cost of selling the vehicle to the customer, which is generally a break even transaction and they make money on service and extras.

Tesla because they sell direct to the customer they include that as an operating line rather than part of the cost of goods sold. So if we actually re-allocate 10% of revenue from SG&A up into cost of goods sold they look like a regular auto maker. So you get 11% of sales as an SG&A expense, which is better than Volkswagen and you get a 15.5% gross margin which is kind of in line with everybody else.

The problem is according to GAAP when you do development work for a car by factory equipment if it’s for a future model or production equipment it’s going to last multiple years and so you get to capitalize it so when you spend the money you don’t put it under income statement you call it an asset and then over the useful life of the asset, generally over 5 to 20 years you depreciate it.

When you’re doing development work and refining a certain car, let’s say you have a drive unit or door problem and you need to fix it, those expenses based on the current car production get expensed. So GM and Ford actually per GAAP accounting they include those expenses in the cost of goods sold and Tesla breaks them out as a separate line item and quite surprisingly that’s actually over 17% of sales is expensed R & D.

If we re-evaluate Tesla’s accounting we still get the same operating margins and so we’re not changing operating margins at all, but we’re re-allocating part of the SG&A and all the expensed R & D into cost of goods sold.

So we think they actually generate negative gross margins and those gross margins are deteriorating not improving. Then on top of that Ford, GM and Volkswagen spend 5 to 8% of revenue on capital expenditures new equipment and new models and Tesla spends 42%.

So there is definitely some flexibility and room there in what you call capital expenditures and I think there is a reasonable possibility that they’re putting production costs and other costs into that capitalized expense line.

So quickly the blue bars are SG&A expense per vehicle sold and that’s the most important on sort of a unit economic basis. Going from the far left to the far right the green line shows how many vehicles they’ve delivered each quarter. So deliveries are going up but SG&A per vehicle is also going up and again that’s not supposed to happen.

Most companies have positive operating leverage where the cost per unit goes down as you increase production. Again we think this shows they’re not a production constraint company and they’re actually doing everything they can to try and increase production and increase demand.

The same thing on the capital expenditures and we just show a couple of charts showing capital expenditure per car is actually increasing as deliveries increase.

And a quick point on the capital intensity of auto manufacturing and instead of building one car, Ford and GM have to spend about $35,000 on the total manufacturing equipment to support a single annual unit of output and so as of today Tesla has 100,000 cars of production capacity per year.

At Tesla’s recent spending of $51,000 per car they would have to invest $11 billion to get to 200,000 deliveries per year and the company currently has a $25 billion market cap.

If they reach their goal of 500,000 deliveries in 2020, we calculate they’re going to spend more than their current market cap, so almost $26 billion on capital expenditures to do so. We argue that Tesla (26:43 – inaudible) probably don’t want them to do that.

Lastly, a quick touch point on the unit economics which should sober us up a little bit. Again we like to look at the unit economics, the per unit cost of the car and this just shows what the previous slides have shown. Revenue per car is decreasing over time and so it goes from the left to the right. SG&A expenses have increased from $9,500 per car to over $20,000 per car in the 3rd quarter.

The same with expensed R& D and they went from $11,000 per car up to $15,000 per car. So Tesla’s loss in cash flow has been increasingly negative.

And like any good promotional company does in the 4th quarter they actually introduce a new cash flow metric saying on their own adjusting cash flow metric they’re positive.

Thank you.

Six Top CEOs Tell Their Story

0

When you talk to management teams of public companies directly, you get a lot more colour on the company…and of course, on who the CEO is as a person. It helps you decide if the company and stock are a good fit for you.  Institutions get that luxury all the time.  Retail investors like most of my subscribers…not so much.

That’s what makes my twice-yearly Subscriber Investment Summits (SIS) so valuable–we bring out some of the best teams in the junior space to meet with my paid subscribers.  One month ago, on March 5 in Toronto, we had over 300 investors come into Toronto to go face-to-face with these CEOs.  We sprinkle in a couple hedge fund managers to give perspective from the buy side, and it makes for a highly entertaining and educational one day event.

Below you will see videos of 6 junior energy CEOs from that day telling my paid subscribers all about their public company–and why my subscribers should invest in their company.

These are all very well run companies who can survive the current low price environment, with at least one flagship asset–low cost, big size–that gives them huge upside leverage to rising oil or natgas prices.

1. Richard Thompson of Marquee Energy (MQL-TSXv; MQLXF-PINK)

Thompson showed great stealth in accumulating a huge contiguous (all-together) land package in the Michichi play just northeast of Calgary.  In a very competitive basin, this was a huge coup.  Thompson explains how he did it, and goes through the low-cost economics of Michichi.

Capture sis 1

2. Brian Schmidt of Tamarack Valley (TVE-TSX; TNEYF-PINK)

Schmidt has done something remarkable–put together a package of wells that have 1.5 year payouts at just $35/b WTI.  His strict cost controls, strong hedges and ability to create efficiencies have made Tamarack Valley a “go-to” name for energy investors.

Capture 2

3. Painted Pony Petroleum (PPY-TSX: PDPYF-PINK)

CEO Pat Ward’s foresight in developing low-cost land packages early has kept share dilution low and equity valuation high.  He was early into the Saskatchewan Bakken and sold that to Crescent Point for $100 million just before the oil price collapsed.  His all-in costs on his Montney natural gas is now under $1/mcf.  Remarkable.

Capture 3

4. Renaissance Oil (ROE-TSXv; RNSFF-PINK)

CEO Craig Steinke and Chairman Ian Telfer did their homework on the recent bidding round in Mexico, and were the ONLY Canadian company to win concessions.  They instantly became a producer, and are leveraging their new “insider” status in Mexico to prepare for more acquisitions.

Capture 4

5. Lithium X Energy (LIX-TSXv; LIXXF-OTC)

Chairman Paul Matysek, CEO Brian Paes Braga and financier Frank Giustra have assembled a management team and property portfolio that should develop into the largest lithium junior in the world.  I originally profiled this story at 45 cents/share, and it now trades great volume at $1.30 as investors realize the fundamental supply-demand for lithium for the next 18-24 months is very bullish.

Capture 5

6. NexGen ( NXE-TSXv; NEGXF-PINK)

NexGen’s stock has more than doubled since the February Subscriber Summit.  This uranium explorer (uranium is used in energy!) has announced stellar results from their Saskatchewan property.  This shallow asset will be one of the largest and high grade uranium assets ever found.  CEO Leigh Curyer tells the story here.

nexgen

March 5 in Toronto was our best event ever.  As we build our brand, more CEOs want to bypass analyst interpretations, and take their story directly to active retail investors.  It’s all about putting retail investors on the same information level as the institutions.  It’s a very empowering day.

JOIN US–our next conference is Tuesday October 11 in Vancouver.  You can sign up now at www.subscribersummit.com.  Sign up HERE.

Keith Schaefer

The $2 Trillion Energy Market That Is Just Ramping Up

0

I want to show you one of the most powerful charts I see in energy right now.

This chart doesn’t show where stocks are going, or where commodities are going.

It shows how energy is being used, and will be used in the coming years—and what is driving that growth.

And it’s so easy to understand—it’s called The Internet of Things, or IoT for short.

It’s where every appliance, every car part, every monitor…has a small computer chip in it that tells both the owner/user and the manufacturer how it’s doing, where it is, and transmits any data it’s programmed to.

It’s impossible to imagine the applications—and the energy savings—all this information—from every industry in the world—will generate.

But this isn’t a potential future market—the multi-TRILLION dollar rollout is happening now.

One of the first big “apps” is city streetlights being outfitted with energy saving LEDs, and having the computer chip tell the light when nobody is around—and lower the luminescence.

Cities are seeing an immediate 30-50% savings in electricity bills—which are often more than half of their overall electricity use.

Here’s a chart that help you get the picture:

1

This chart says there will be tens of billions of units.

I think there will be more. Think of every towel in every hotel with an RFID tag/computer chip.  Theft goes to zero.

Think of every  parking meter in every city with a computer chip that can tell a server if that stall is empty right now.  The time savings, and the efficiency savings, will be incredible.

That’s why there is a spending spree happening in the IoT space by Big Technology.  I know.  My subscribers and I have already had one of our IoT stocks bought out for a 90% premium—that’s a near-double in one day.

I’ve found a stock with even more potential than that though—with big fat hardware margins and incredibly profitable and growing software margins.

Because this company has it all, I don’t expect them to be around long.   Their sales backlog is growing each quarter.

The growth here is stunning.  Investors are winning at energy right now in this space—with this stock.  Get the name and symbol—RIGHT HERE.

 

The Next Big Fight in Oil If Prices Rise

0

As the oil price fell from $105/barrel in 2014 to $26/barrel in 2016, producers, service companies and banks/lenders worked very co-operatively to keep as many people employed and as much oil flowing as possible.

It has been a remarkably co-operative endeavour for the global energy industry.

I expect that to change to become a lot more cut-throat between these players as the oil price rises.  There will be intense competition between the producers and service sector for every extra dollar that any increase in the oil price brings back into the energy complex.

Paul Kibsgaard, CEO of  Schlumberger (NYSE:SLB) sent a Big Warning to that effect during a speech at the Scotia Howard Weil Conference in New Orleans recently.

Schlumberger is the world’s largest oilfield service firm with 105,000 employees and operations in more countries than I can name.  These guys have a lot of fingers on the pulse of what is really going on in the industry.

Kibsgaard notes that the oil producers are now doing the same three things they have done in every prior oil crash since the 1970s.

First, companies bring exploration spending to a near complete halt. Second, companies slow development spending of already discovered reserves.  This is simple—less cash means less spending, and The Market will crucify any company  increasing their debt now.

The Third Factor is the producers across the industry simultaneously squeezing the service industry for price concessions.  This is a “my pain is your pain” kind of thing.

Kibsgaard believes that it is this squeezing of the service industry that has created almost all of the so-called “efficiency gains” that the producers have touted.  

1

Source: Schlumberger Howard Weil Presentation

The producers would have us believe that they have gotten that much better at drilling wells faster and making them more productive.  You know, the graphs that look like this:

2

Kibsgaard believes that there is some truth in that, but most “efficiencies” are really service cost reductions.

Kibsgaard’s view is that as soon as activity levels in the industry pick up those pricing levels are headed higher.  As the service costs rise, so too will the costs of drilling and completing a shale well.

The break-even costs being promoted by these companies might be true today, but as soon as activity heats up they are headed higher.

What he’s saying is that investors should not expect the cash flows of oil producers to rocket up along with any increase in oil prices—because the service sector will get be getting a good chunk of that increased cash flow.

Let me share two conversations I very recently had on costs with Canadian management teams, one from the service sector and one from a producer (I host my own conference calls with management teams on a regular basis and provide transcripts to subscribers).

From the service company executive:

“I think when the (oil) market comes back it’s likely not realistic…that the current service costs that the operators are enjoying—and rightfully so—and telling investors how they lowered drilling and completion costs and lowered finding and development costs.

It’s not what people think and it’s not guys in the field all over the place making $300,000 working half the year. It’s guys making decent wages but they have skills and experience that justifies what they are paid…I don’t think there is too much more room to go down.”

Now here’s the producer executive:

“I find in Western Canada we, as industry, haven’t made the adjustments there that are necessary.  There is a lot of room to go in those service costs. I know those guys won’t tell you but there is a lot of fat there that needs to be trimmed yet. I’ve had discussions with Presidents of those companies that they need to change.

“For example, I get on a plane and go to Toronto and its 20% full of oil field workers. How is it at $30 oil that we can afford to fly people back and forth to Eastern Canada? So there is one example and I can go on with about 8 or 10 but I’d still be talking here at lunch if I rattled them all off.”

Thems fightin’ words.

________________________________________

As an aside, Kibsgaard had one other major point in his talk–that the industry has not found any efficient new way to get oil out of the ground cheaply this century.  Shale didn’t work because of efficiencies he says–it worked because the industry threw hundreds of billions of low cost debt at it to make it work.

The yellow line in the slide below from Kibsgaard’s presentation shows the massive amount of dollars that were thrown at oil and gas development in recent years.  The increase in spending is incredible.

3

Source: Schlumberger Howard Weil Presentation

The slide shows capex spending going from $100 billion in the year 2000 to nearly $700 billion in 2014.    Yet with a sevenfold increase in spending the rate of global production growth really hasn’t strayed from its gentle long term rise.

Very high (and for a while stable) oil prices combined with incredibly low interest rates funded all of this spending.  Yes the innovation was important, but without that incredible surge in spending the shale boom would not have turned global oil markets upside-down.

Money made it happen.  Lots of money.

And as Kibsgaard notes in his presentation:
The fact remains that the industry’s technical and financial performance was already challenged with oil prices at $100/bbl, as seen by the fading cash flow and profitability of both the IOCs and independents in recent years

The point of Kibsgaard’s presentation was to say that the industry does not have a cost-effective solution to develop increasingly complex hydrocarbon resources.

EDITORS NOTE–I do own some oil producers, but my biggest position is in an off-the-beaten-track energy stock that pays me a steady–and increasing–dividend. I make $3500 a month off this beauty–the symbol and name of this stock is right HERE.

How Investors Get Screwed by Big Oil

0
Energy Companies And Share Buybacks – A Lesson In Capital MismanagementThe job of the men and women at the top of Big Oil is to help manage capital through the volatile cycles of this business.For that they are handsomely rewarded with big salaries and stock options.These are experienced people who have been through the cycles of this industry.

Yet they allocate capital as though they have no idea that these cycles exist.

Remember, the job of Big Oil is not to grow quickly.  These companies grow slowly, professionally, reliably, and provide modest dividend growth.  Capital allocation is key.

So why is it when stock prices are high, the big oil companies buy back billions and billions of dollars of shares?  And then when stock prices are low the big oil companies shut their buyback programs down.

The management of senior oil—and even some intermediates—have abysmal track records in allocating big chunks of capital for share buybacks.

After I show you these numbers, I’ll show you The King of Capital Allocation—the best ever maybe.

Let’s look at a few examples.

In 2014 with its share price average $124 Chevron (NYSE:CVX) repurchased $4.4 billion worth of shares.

In 2015 Chevron with its share price falling as low as $70 per share Chevron has repurchased no shares.

chevron
Chevron was buying billions of shares at the worst possible time.  And buying none now that its shares have gone on sale.

That isn’t to pick on Chevron, they are just doing what the entire industry does.

In 2014 Marathon Oil’s (NYSE:MRO) stock price spent most of the year above $35 and the company repurchased $1 billion worth of shares.  Marathon is NOT one of the major oil producers and a billion dollars is real money.

In 2015 Marathon repurchased no shares even though its share price was near the single digits by the end of the year.
marathon
Marathon now finds itself looking to sell assets in a horrible market for dispositions in order to shore up its balance sheet.

I bet the company would like to have that billion dollars of 2014 repurchases done when the share price was near its all-time high back in 2014.

Again, this isn’t to pick on Marathon.  After all everyone is doing it.

Even the 800 pound gorilla Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) buys shares aggressively when they are expensive only to cut back drastically when the share price is depressed.

Here are the last eight quarters of share repurchases by Exxon in the billions:

Q1 2014 – $3.9 billion
Q2 2014 – $3.0 billion
Q3 2014 – $3.0 billion
Q4 2014 – $3.2 billion
Q1 2015 – $1.8 billion
Q2 2015 – $1.0 billion
Q3 2015 – $0.4 billion
Q4 2015 – $0.5 billion
exxon
Once again this is a case of buy aggressively when the share price is high.  Shut down the buying when the shares are depressed.

I came away concluding that the people leading these companies have either done a terrible job in making share repurchase decisions or that they have no idea that they produce commodities that tend to be cyclical in nature.

Now, if  you haven’t stopped reading in disgust, I want to introduce you to someone.

Share Repurchases Done Right – The Henry Singleton Story
henry-singleton
Source: CSInvesting.org

Henry Singleton of Teledyne has the best operating and capital deployment record in American business”.

That sentence above is not my assessment of Henry Singleton.  That quote is attributed to Warren Buffett in John Train’s classic investing book The Money Masters.

An investor who bought Singleton’s Teledyne stock in 1966 and held it for 25 years made 53X on the initial amount invested.  Cha cha cha!

The biggest key to Singleton’s success in creating shareholder was how he used the share price of Teledyne to his and his shareholders advantage.

During the 1960s Teledyne’s share price was soaring. Singleton himself thought Teledyne’s share price to be overvalued, so he took advantage of the situation.  Singleton used overvalued/expensive Teledyne shares to make acquisitions of companies at prices that equated much lower valuations.

Using richly valued shares to acquire other businesses at lower valuations is immediately accretive to earnings.

In total Singleton made 130 such purchases.

Make a note for later.  When your stock is expensive you don’t repurchase it, you look to use it as an acquisition currency.

But Singleton wasn’t a one trick pony.

In the 1970s the stock market swooned and so did the share price of Teledyne.  At this lower price Singleton believed that Teledyne’s shares were significantly undervalued by the market.

Teledyne shares were now a good buy.

Again, Singleton knew what to do.

He bought back shares.  A lot of them.

From 1971 through 1980 he reduced Teledyne’s share count by nearly 75 percent.  In doing so each remaining shareholder owned much more of Teledyne on a per share basis after the repurchases.

Singleton used what the stock market was doing with Teledyne’s share price to the advantage of his shareholders.  Teledyne didn’t suffer from stock market volatility, it benefitted from it enormously.

I know what you are thinking.  This isn’t rocket science.  Buy back shares when the stock price is depressed, issue shares when the stock price is high.

Who couldn’t figure that out?

It is a simple concept, yet few managers put it into practice.  None have successfully exploited the volatility of the stock market the way that Henry Singleton did.

When you see what the big oil companies have been doing the only conclusion you can reach is that they have never heard of Henry Singleton.

Big Oil–Don’t Let That Cash Burn a Hole In Your Pocket

Now, to be fair, nobody saw the sudden-ness or depth of this downturn in oil price coming.  But this IS a very cyclical business.

And now, all of these companies clearly need to stop repurchasing shares in order to protect their balance sheets. I’m not suggesting that they should be doing anything differently today.

However, this is the position that they have put themselves in.

If these companies had either paid down debt when oil prices were $100 per barrel and stock prices were high—or let the cash burn a hole in their pocket until a cycle trough—their balance sheets would not be a concern.

Investors see it cycle after cycle.

These companies get aggressive spending their cash when commodity prices are high only to have to hunker down to ride out the storm when inevitably the bottom falls out.

These companies shouldn’t be worried about cash burning a hole in their pockets.  They should not buy back shares at the top of the cycle.
Just relax and let the cash build up on the balance sheet.

Then when the cycle turns down that cash is available to buy back shares or make acquisitions or just allow shareholders to have a good night’s sleep.

Another word for this is discipline.

I didn’t carefully select Chevron, Marathon and Exxon to prove a point.  These were the first three large producers that I looked at.

Virtually the entire industry is run this way.

The cyclicality in this business should be there to be exploited.  Not to suffer from.

I’m pretty sure that is how Henry Singleton would do it.

Check that, I know it is.

$2 Trillion in Spending Will Create A Lot of Profits

0

In World War II, when the Allied countries laid out their first strategic bombing plans–the first target they selected was easy to agree on.

It was the German electrical grid.  The Allies knew that without electricity the Germans couldn’t do anything.

If Germany had been attacking the United States it would have selected the exact same target.  America’s most important asset was and still is its electric grid.  The entire economy runs on it.

Not much has changed with the U.S. electric grid since the 1940s.  I don’t just mean how important it is…..I mean that literally, almost nothing about it has changed.

It is antiquated.  And that has become a major problem.  In 2009 the U.S. Department of Energy released a report on the U.S. electric grid that said:

” . . . the current electric power delivery system infrastructure will be unable to ensure a reliable, cost-effective, secure, and environmentally sustainable supply of energy for the next two decades …..”

Sound the alarm bells please.  Within 20 years of this report the Department of Energy believed that the U.S. electric grid would be unreliable.

The report went on to conclude “the current U.S. Electric power grid is nearing the end of its useful life.”

Do you get how important those statements are?  America runs on that electric grid.  Everything in America runs in some way on that electric grid.

This isn’t a case where it would be nice to see some money spent on the grid to update it.

There is no option but to spend that money.

The United States will get this job done. The future in this case is certain. 

Massive amounts of money will be spent upgrading the U.S. electric grid and it all has to happen in the next two decades.   This is the opportunity investors have been waiting for.

The main reason why investing is so incredibly hard–is because the future is virtually impossible to predict.

That is why–when you find a company that fills you with an unusually high degree of certainty–you need to act.

The Size Of The Prize Here Is Enormous

The United States electrical grid has been described as the most complicated machine in the world.

According to a report from energy consultant firm the Rocky Mountain Institute the grid is going to require $2 trillion in upgrades by 2030.

That money will fund thousands of jobs, and billions in profits for the companies involved. If you have children heading off to college, this is the industry you may want to steer them towards.  This is the LARGEST sure-bet I see.

And it’s definitely the sector to be investing in.

I’ve been hunkered down in my basement researching the U.S. electric grid for the better part of nine months.

The reason that I became obsessed with this opportunity because it is truly the best of both worlds.

First, the amount of money that is going to have to be thrown at this problem in a short amount of time is simply staggering.  I mean $2 trillion in 20 years…….it is mind blowing.

Second, there is just no way around spending all of that money.  Nothing in the United States could function without a reliable electric grid.

After nine months of reading it became very clear which company I wanted to own to profit from this opportunity.

The main reason we think investing is so hard is because the future is virtually impossible to predict. That is why–when you find a company that fills you with an unusually high degree of certainty–you need to act.

I think the entire sector will do well as a whole, but this company….I found one that is really special. This company makes the US power grid better–and smarter. I have an unusually high degree of certainty in its growth and profitability.

Today, I want to share my full report on this company with you–risk free.  If I give you the best investment idea you are going to see in the next two decades I’m willing to bet that you are going to become an OGIB subscriber.

Folks, this isn’t an investment opportunity for the next 20 years.

This is the investment opportunity for the next 20 years.

I know, because my first investment in this space has already given me and subscribers huge profits.  PowerSecure (POWR-NASD) was just taken over by the Southern Company (SO-NYSE) utility for a 90% premium to its previous day’s close.  OGIB subscribers made 50% in six months from the original purchase price.

It’s a sure-bet sector.  And all my research says this debt free company is the right company to play it.  CLICK HERE for the name and trading symbol.

Keith Schaefer

 

This Man Called the Bottom (so far)

0

 HF Logo

 Guest Post

Hi, this is Keith Schaefer—even though you don’t recognize the logo above.  Since oil crashed back in the fall of 2014 we have had a few false starts at an oil price recovery.

Is this rally real–or another tease?

I’ve helped the editor at Hedge Fund Insiders http://www.hedgefundinsiders.com/, Reece Morgan, start a brilliant investment website.  Reece keeps a close eye on what the best investors in the world are doing—the people who have amazing 15-20 year track records.  The Hedge Fund Insiders investing approach is to build a portfolio made exclusively of the best ideas from the best investors in the world.    

I’ve seen Reece’s research, and he is onto something.  

One of those elite investors thinks that a significant oil price recovery is in fact coming in 2016 and that our window to get long is indeed quite short.

Here is the latest from Hedge Fund Insiders:
Hayman Capital’s Kyle Bass made half a billion dollars betting against U.S. residential mortgage back securities in 2007.
Today he believes that there is by far one place where investors are going to want to be invested for the next 3 to 5 years.

It is the energy sector.

1

Bass thinks that the window of opportunity to get invested in the sector will last another few months after which investors will be chasing the price of oil and related energy equities higher.

Given how far the sector has fallen, it could be a lot higher.

His Track Record For Making Successful Macro Calls

The great mutual fund manager Peter Lynch spent virtually no time thinking about macro level issues.  He famously said that “if you spend 13 minutes analyzing economic forecasts you’ve wasted 10 minutes”.

That approach worked out pretty well for Lynch.

As manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund from 1977 to 1990 he achieved an annual average return of 29%.  The Magellan Fund had $20 million of assets under administration when Lynch took over and $14 billion when he left.

Simply ridiculous.

Kyle Bass has a very different approach.  He is very focused on the macro level and his approach has worked out pretty well for his investors.

He has successfully profited from investing based on the several macro calls:

  • He bet against U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities prior to the collapse of the housing bubble
  • He bet against the economic collapse of Greece in 2012 by owning credit default swaps on Greek Government Debt
  • He successfully bet on Japan embarking on a massive bond-buying program in 2013 by positioning his fund to profit from a decline in the Yen

Bass isn’t perfect, he isn’t right 100% of the time.  But he is right a lot more often than he isn’t and the results of his successful trades have been spectacular.

Why Bass Believes Oil Is About To Turn Higher

Bass believes that the world is going to be shocked how quickly we go from an oil “glut” to an oil “deficit”.

He doesn’t say this because he has a gut feel, he says it because he has crunched the numbers and the data tells him that it is so.

He explained his reasoning firstly as:

In energy, I just believe that the margin of safety for the globe is the smallest it’s ever been in energy. Global demand is 96 million barrels per day, the highest it’s ever been, and incremental supply capacity, let’s say swing capacity, is at the lowest point as a percentage of that ever, about a million and a half barrels a day

From 2006 through 2008 the reason that oil prices spiked up to $150 per barrel was that the market became increasingly concerned about the lack of spare capacity.

Well, we have even less spare capacity today as everyone (including OPEC) is essentially pumping flat out.

2

The difference this time is that we also have an unusual amount of oil in inventory.

Bass believes that inventory is going to start to decline rapidly as U.S. production rolls over in a big way in 2016.
His firm had done a thorough analysis of oil supply.  Their conclusion was that U.S. production alone would drop by a million barrels per day from its March 2015 peak by April of 2016.

When that happens all of a sudden the world is going to be consuming more oil on a daily basis than is produced, and inventories are going to start to fall.  With everyone pumping flat out already, there isn’t going to be any new production readily available to make up for that shortfall.

From glut to deficit just like that.

How Bass Is Positioned To Profit

Bass got into this oil trade early.  Too early.

He was early in betting against the U.S. housing bubble too, but in the end he was very right and made a lot of money.
As of last June he owned several U.S. listed oil and gas producers in the Hayman portfolio.  Hayman had decent sized positions in Anadarko Petroleum, Bonanza Creek Energy, Continental Energy and Diamondback Energy to name a few.

Judging by his portfolio he had chosen to own a basket of oil and gas companies rather than make a concentrated bet on a few favorites.

Hayman’s September SEC filing revealed that Bass sold all of those positions over the summer months, likely surprised by oil taking a second leg down in August.

Bass is still long oil, but this time he owns the commodity instead of the producers.

The appeal is simple–by owning the commodity he won’t lose much if the price stays lower for longer.  But if he owned the producers lower for longer could end very badly for some companies.

What We Do At Hedge Fund Insiders

The core belief at Hedge Fund Insiders is that the retail investor is making a mistake trying to compete with professional investors.

A retail investor can dedicate a few hours a week to investment research. The top funds can dedicate hundreds of man hours researching a single idea as well as spend millions on third party research.

Instead of competing against the top funds, we suggest profiting from them. The complicating factor is that these funds have large minimum investment requirements and are only available to the wealthiest 1%.

That is where we come in. We level the playing field for the retail investor by studying the portfolios of the top hedge funds and digging out their very best ideas.

We focus only on the best of the best.  We follow only the managers that have proven themselves over decades to consistently outperform the market.  These investors make very few mistakes.

By building a portfolio comprised only of the very best ideas from the very best investors in the world we believe that we can both improve investment returns while reducing investment risk.

You have to admit, our approach makes a lot of sense.

So who is the best of the best?  That’s a tough call, but I’ll tell you who my favourite is.  And I’ll also tell you the stock in which he has been buying a BIG position lately.  And guess what—it’s an energy stock. Click here.  to get the name, symbol and my full report on it, for FREE.

The Right Guy, In The Right Place, At Exactly The Right Time

0

Sometimes you write a story.  Sometimes a story writes itself.

In the next three sentences I’m going to give you everything you need to know.

One…

With more oil and gas producers in financial distress than aren’t, this has to be an historic opportunity to be buying oil and gas assets (especially shale).

Two…

Former EOG Resources (NYSE:EOG) Chairman and CEO Mark Papa is likely the most respected shale oil businessman in the industry.

Three…

Papa just brought public a blank check company called Silver Run Acquisition Corp (NASD:SRAQU) which has nothing to do but spend $450 million of cash on oil and gas assets.

What a position to be in.

Countless companies are desperate to get rid of assets to raise cash.  Lenders are taking over oil and gas assets that they don’t want and also badly want to sell. Assets are available at rock bottom prices and buyers with cash are few and far between.

And here is Papa, one of the most knowledgeable players in the game in the very enviable position of being one of the very few buyers in a panicked market.

If that isn’t a recipe for success I don’t know what is.

The “Godfather” Of Shale Oil

While a significant percentage of the U.S. shale industry teeters on the brink of financial ruin shale oil producer EOG Resources (NYSE: EOG) remains on sound financial footing with some of the very best shale assets in the industry.

Shareholders can largely thank Mark Papa for that.  He retired as CEO of EOG in 2013 and resigned from the Board of Directors at the end of 2014, but he left behind a company with great assets and in great financial shape.

EOG of course is lucky to exist at all. In 1999 EOG was spun out of Enron, the high flying trading company which wanted out of the boring E&P business.  Papa became CEO and Chairman of EOG (which is short for Enron Oil and Gas).

That was great news for Papa and EOG.  As you know, Enron went down in flames in 2001 in one of the most high profile fraud cases in the history of American business.

The unwanted spinoff EOG went on to become a significant oil and gas producer.

Papa transformed EOG into a company focused on innovation.  It quickly became an early adopter of horizontal drilling and multi-stage fracking and became a leader in producing natural gas from shale.

As a testament to its innovative culture EOG would be nicknamed by an analyst as “the Apple of oil”.

The shale gas focus worked well for EOG.  It also worked really well for quite a few of its competitors.  In 2007 Papa suddenly had a moment of extreme clarity.

He realized before almost everyone else that there was so much gas being found in shale that U.S. natural gas prices were going to be ruined for decades.

So Papa decided to do something.  He immediately had EOG do a complete 180 degree turn.  He told his geologists to stop looking for natural gas and to start looking for shale oil.

Papa put EOG ahead of the game.  Conventional thinking in 2007 was still that the tiny pores in shale rocks worked well with small natural gas molecules, but that bigger oil molecules wouldn’t be able to flow through.

Dutifully, the EOG geologists followed their boss’s orders and came back with a shale play in Texas called the Eagle Ford.  For an entire year EOG quietly signed leases with landowners in the Eagle Ford and paid very little to do it.

In 2009 EOG tested a horizontal well with fracks and knew it had a big win.

Fast forward to the spring of 2010 and Papa and EOG were ready to tell shareholders that they believed they had locked down nearly a billion barrels of oil reserves in the Eagle Ford.

The company was busy elsewhere looking for shale oil.While Papa and EOG were locking up a big land position in the Eagle Ford they were also busy in the Bakken.

EOG had drilled a well as far back as 2006 in the Bakken, but at the time believed that only a very small portion of the entire formation would work.

That turned out to be a mistake because the decision resulted in EOG leasing only 20% of the land in the Bakken when it could have had almost all of it.

Near the end of 2008 when oil prices were crashing in the midst of the financial crisis EOG drilled an experimental horizontal well using a new fracking technique.That well came on production at more than 1,400 barrels which was more than 4 times what nearby wells had been achieving.

That high production well with the new techniques greatly expanded the amount of acreage in the Bakken that could be developed economically.

It also meant that Papa and EOG had built two massive land positions in the core of two of the major shale oil plays.

A Return Focused Mindset

Perhaps even more important than the assets Papa left EOG with is the culture that he created. More than most of the other shale oil independents EOG has been more “return” focused than obsessed with growth.

That has left EOG with a balance sheet much better equipped to handle the downturn.

Papa brings Silver Run Acquisition Corp to the public market as a “blank check” company.  That means that Papa and his crew have raised cash from investors for the specific purpose of making acquisitions.

The shareholders are willing to front the cash despite having no idea which specific assets or companies might be acquired.

The fact that Papa was able to get this done in this market speaks volumes.  So far in 2016 there have been only five IPOs vs 27 at the same point last year.  The market appetite for IPOs has been minimal and the appetite for energy companies significantly less than that.

Also a sign of respect for Papa is that Silver Run was able to raise $450 million which is $50 million more than the company was targeting.

The way a blank check company works is that management has two years within which to invest the cash or it is returned to shareholders.

Given the current state of the oil and gas market, finding an attractive acquisition target should not be difficult.

Papa Believes Shale Is In For A Rebound

While speaking at the CERA conference last month Papa suggested that the shale industry is in for huge pain for the next 6 to 12 months.

But for the survivors he sees much better days ahead.Papa believes that oil prices will swing higher, perhaps substantially so.

He believes that the driver of this will be world demand growth of a million barrels per day for the next five years and the fact that capital spending on mega projects has screeched to a halt.

Papa believes that the world is going to need more oil in the coming years.  With big project spending halted across the industry the source of much of that oil is going to have to be shale.

Which is right where Silver Run and Papa are likely to be. The right man, in the right place at exactly the right time.

Keith Schaefer

Editors Note—my favourite energy dividend stock has ALREADY increased its dividend in 2016—and now energy prices are on the rise.  It’s one of the few companies in the energy sector that has a business model that works here at $35 oil.  Get this stock working for you TODAY.