The Great Race in the Oil Patch: Happening Now

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There’s a race going on in the oilpatch now to the bitter end—the end of the year.

And it’s not being driven by economics.  It’s being driven by the REAL currency in the oilpatch:

Reputation.

The energy market is cyclical and all the veteran producers and bankers of the oilpatch know this.

Each senior management group knows their reputation is built on being able to focus on what you can control and letting the rest of the chips fall where they may.

The single most important that determines your reputation is hitting production rates that you promised to the market—though not at any cost.

That means that right now, many producers are working overtime right now to achieve those exit production rates—even in the face of horrible oil prices.

(After watching the oilpatch for five years, it’s easy to name Management Reputation as the single most mis-understood part of valuing stocks by retail investors.  That’s why you see so many crazy articles on SeekingAlpha.com talk about stocks being under- or over-valued; the author has no clue about the premium or discount some teams get.)

Production is a meaningful and simple tangible way to evaluate teams and companies, so it is used a lot in the business.

Whether it is a VP of Production or Operations for a large foreign owned multi-national business or the President of a small, publicly traded company, that year-end production number will affect somebody’s bonus.

For the small players, it’s more just recognition—Reputation—by  the Market as opposed to outright cash or stock options for their peer in a larger company.  Reputation gives shareholders confidence in allowing you to raise new equity.

There’s more pressure on the small producer to meet those year-end production numbers, as there is a lot more riding on meeting that target—like a potential bank line increase.

Regardless of size, the next two weeks will be very stressful for virtually every company out there as they work frantically to maximize production volumes for year end.

This may seem counter-intuitive in a market that has seen a 40% haircut to its price in the last few months.  The percentage decline is even greater on margins and free cash flow.

Yet management realizes that it’s not all about pricing today or even next month but the long game.  In the long game, your reputation is your currency.  It’s how you are able to raise capital in both good times and bad, attract quality people to your team and trade at a better multiple than your peers.  That higher multiple is what allows teams to issue less stock on financings and M&A work. Less stock = more leverage for investors.

This can lead to a self fulfilling cycle of success as it allows you to take advantage of situations where you can raise money when others can’t or you can use your stock to take out someone who is doing OK but doesn’t have the “all star” premium that you do. Being able to exploit these opportunities is what takes a management team to the next level in the eyes of bankers and investors.

But you still have to be able to bring all that oil up out of the ground cheaply. It’s a fine line to be able to achieve your production targets, especially if they are material increases, without over paying and more importantly, without over extending your balance sheet.

Case in point: today’s market, where it appears we may be in for a period of fairly weak pricing.  If you’ve gone after your production targets at all costs, you will quickly find yourself struggling with lower cash flow to service your debt and potentially not even be able to sustain production with existing cash flow–let alone a dividend if you have one.

It’s a lot easier to show prosperous year over year production gains when WTI is $100. There is so much cash flow–you would really have to screw up badly to get yourself into trouble. The true challenge comes when cash flow and debt are tight.

So reputation is also about achieving those production rates without sacrificing capital.

How often do you hear analysts tell you to follow the successful management teams and you see the market willing to pay a premium when these teams start over?  (In industry lingo that’s what’s called a re-cap; a re-capitalization of an old shell company).

There’s a reason for that – reputation.  This year end will help separate the great management teams from the good management teams.  The great ones will get things done regardless of the challenges thrown at them by the market.

In this business prices come and go—but delivering on your promises—or exceeding them—without hurting your balance sheet is the true currency in the long game.

So this year end be on the lookout for companies that have met production targets and still have a reasonable debt load.  These are the companies that will not only survive this current low price environment but thrive when the pendulum swings and prices start heading back up.

Who says you can’t buy reputation?

EDITORS NOTE:  I know what stocks to buy now, and when to buy them.  I have a “cheat sheet” on each of the 4 Top Junior Producers to own.  These teams have real currency and know when to use it-and with the downturn in oil prices, they will be able to pick off assets from weaker groups.  FIND OUT NOW to see what I’m going to buy, and when I’m going to buy them.

+Keith Schaefer

Tax Loss Digging Found This Gem

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There’s just one stock that interests me at this time of year.

This is The Most Wonderfully Inefficient Time of the Year for the stock market.  It’s tax-loss-selling season.

But I’m not running out buying any big basket of energy stocks.  The selling may be overdone, but it can stay overdone for a long time.

There’s one company in this sector that is NOT a commodity.  They have a unique business model.  It gives them an edge.

In fact, I think they are likely the only company in the sector that sees higher revenues in 2015 than 2014.  AND they have the best profit margins I see in the sector—anywhere.

The Big Difference for this company? Time is on their side.  You see, the energy producers have to fight natural declines in their wells.

This company actually sees demand naturally increase year over year.

That’s where I’m putting my money.  And even though I’ve got a lot of it in cash right now, I’m only buying one.  Read about it right here

+Keith Schaefer

Donald Dony: Four Oil Stocks That May Have Bottomed

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by Donald DonyThe major decline in oil prices over the past five months has placed many securities into a freefall. The commodity-rich SPX/TSX, for example, has fallen 10.00% since September, putting into a bear market (Chart 1).decline

Chart 1The TSX Energy sector has declined even further, cratering almost 40% bringing on the expectation that a sharp rebound from this group is imminent (Chart 2).  However, the majority of energy stocks on the TSX are not displaying the typical ‘rebound’ characteristics. They are still in a pattern of lower highs and lower lows (downtrend trend).  Nevertheless, there are a few stocks that are leading the sector and appear to stabilize or recover.spx

Chart 2Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. (CNQ) ranks near the top of the list with its “Double bottom” pattern and rising building buying momentum.  Though CNQ has not started to recover, only a move above $39-$40 would imply that, there is certainly evidence of rebuilding strength (Chart 3).CNQ


Chart 3Petyo Exploration & Development LTD. (PEY) is another example of a potential bottom (Chart 4).
With the rebound from the October low ($30.41) and a retest in December, PEY appears to be stabilizing.  We would still need to see an advance over $35 to confirm the new uptrend, but the outlook is improving.
PEY

Chart 4

Advantage Oil & Gas Ltd. and Peyto have similar trading patterns.  Both saw fresh new lows in October and some stability starting to occurr at a higher level in December.  Buying momentum (RSI) moved out of the oversold level (30 or below) in November and appears to be recovering.  The recent consolidation in December 2014 matches the resistance high back in January 2014, which suggests some buying pressure is returning.  A move over $5.50 would soliditfy our view that AAV is starting a recovery (Chart 5).

 ADVANTAGE

 
Chart 5PrairieSky Royalty Ltd.  (PSK) is a newer addition to the TSX Energy sector.  Nevertheless, it is already showing traditional patterns.  A well-formed “Double bottom” has developed over the last few months.  These formations, if it is not broken, are often the precursors of a solid base. A move above $33 would increase the odds of a recovery to $37.  We would buy with caution at this point (Chart 6).
PRAIRIE


Chart 6Bottom line: WTI is nearing the bottom of the $60-$65 support range.  If oil prices move below this zone, then $55-$50 is the next range.  The impact of sub-$60 prices will have a negative impact on these four stocks.  We suggest erring on the side of caution and staying on the sidelines for now.Donald W. Dony, FCSI, CFTe, MFTA
www.technicalspeculator.com
dwdony@shaw.ca

EDITOR’S NOTE—This stock rout in oil means I can buy the leaders cheap—and I did that yesterday.  This company is obscenely profitable even at these oil prices.  It has always traded at a HUGE premium.  But not yesterday. True Wealth is buying the best-of-breed companies at low points in the cycle. CLICK HERE to learn more.

+Keith Schaefer

The Very Bearish Case for Canadian Natural Gas

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Alberta Gas – All Dressed Up and No Place to Go?

By Chris James, CFA
Canadian natural gas prices could drop by well over half in 2015 as new pipelines allow very cheap Marcellus gas to flood North America says a November 4 report by Canadian brokerage firm Macquarie Securities.

The report–titled Red Dawn–says Marcellus gas could displace western Canadian gas in Ontario, the Midwest and even the US west coast–forcing Canadians to accept huge discounts in their gas prices just to be able to sell their natural gas at all.

The report outlines how inter-connected the North American gas grid is.  And a huge flood of Marcellus gas is already changing gas flows across the entire continent.  Macquarie outlines TEN new pipeline flow increases into the Midwest, FIVE into the US Northeast, and THREE into eastern Canada.

chart 1

Source: www.marcelluscoalition.org

Research by independent energy consultants RBN Energy show even more–they say there are now more than 50 pipeline projects underway which will increase Marcellus takeaway capacity by more than 28 billion cubic feet per day!

Macquarie says as Marcellus gas floods the Midwest–a big Canadian export market–US gas from the Rocky Mountains will back up, lowering its prices, and make it more able to compete against Canadian gas in the Pacific markets. Macquarie’s conclusion:

“The biggest loser, from a price perspective, is AECO, as it loses three of its former demand destinations. This should result in significant AECO discounts, in order to become more competitive.”

chart 2

AECO stands for Alberta Energy Company, and is the Canadian benchmark price for natural gas. Consider it another “hub” like Henry Hub in the USA. In the above graph, AECO gas prices are the red line and Marcellus gas prices are the blue.  Macquarie suggests that most of North American gas prices will have to come down to low-cost Marcellus prices to compete, once pipelines can transport it to most of North America.

Canadian gas prices–being the farthest from US markets–will have to absorb higher pipeline transportation costs to get to market–creating big price discounts.

How significant could these price discounts be?  Macquarie’s math suggests the actual October 2014 average price of $3.33/mmbtu would have been only $1.40/mmbtu with cheap Marcellus gas spreading out across the continent in new pipelines. That’s a 58% haircut.

This chart shows the AECO discount to US gas (NYMEX) is already widening.

chart 3

Growth in natural gas production in the low-cost Marcellus is absolutely stunning–and it has been slowly eating away at Canadian markets for a few years.  But now that pace should pick dramatically with several new pipelines getting gas north, south east and west of the Marcellus.

At the end of 2010, gas production from the Marcellus averaged less than 3 billion cubic feet per day (BCF/D) but that had skyrocketed to over 19 BCF/D recently.  Marcellus gas accounts for 98% of all U.S. production growth since September, in spite of facing pipeline restraints to deliver the gas out of the region.  US gas production hit an all time high of 71.9 BCF/D in late November.

If this producing area was a country, here is how they would stack up in terms of daily production according to the most recent statistics from the International Energy Agency (“IEA”);

  1. U.S.               66.7 billion cubic feet per day
  2. Russia            64.9
  3. Marcellus       19.1
  4. Qatar             15.6
  5. Iran               15.4
  6. Canada          15.0

Industry consultants RBN Energy estimate Marcellus production reaching 30 BCF per day by 2018 – that is just four years away and will be greater than the combined production of Norway, China and Saudi Arabia.

As a result of the past several years of low prices, natural gas has already made great inroads in the U.S. energy market supplying more than half of all U.S. homes and a third of power generation.  But the powerful coal lobby in Washington and lower oil prices means that gas will have a tough time increasing its domestic market share.

More natural gas demand is coming, however.  There are numerous projects (new LNG export facilities, major industrial projects) ramping up in the Gulf Coast, but these are at least two or three years away.

So where does all this cheap Marcellus gas go?

There are at least five major corridors, three of which could have a major negative impact on Western Canadian producers:

  • North to Sarnia, Ontario where it enters the established Eastern Canadian pipeline system and will compete with Western Canadian gas which currently enjoys premium (anything above Marcellus pricing is premium)
  • West to Chicago and the Midwest, another market currently paying premium prices and served by Western Canadian supplies. In time, excess gas will flow all the way to the U.S. West Coast
  • South via Ohio to the Gulf Coast market where Canadian gas is currently shipped
  • East to the fully satisfy the needs of the nearby Northeast market in the U.S. and Eastern Canada
  • South via the Atlantic also serving power plants as it makes its way to the Gulf Coast

What about pricing?

Macquarie suggests that producers of dry gas in the Marcellus (northeast Pennsylvania) have a breakeven price of only $2.50 per million BTU’s but the producers of wet gas (southeast Pennsylvania and Ohio) reduce that breakeven cost to only $2.00 through the sale of associated natural gas liquids (NGLs). (And I’ve seen cost projections from other sources that show Marcellus gas with a breakeven MUCH lower–near zero.)

Gas producers in other US basins like the Eagle Ford, Permian, Williston and Anadarko, just to name a few, aren’t going to sit back and lose volumes–so this will bring additional pricing pressures into the entire North American marketplace.

The same goes for Western Canadian producers.  They’ll have to fight for market share on price and not be able to command premium prices to Marcellus gas in eastern Canada and the U.S. Midwest like they are now.

But an equally large looming threat is that of Marcellus gas flowing further west to the major north-south pipeline network feeding the Gulf Coast so that Canadian producers will have a real battle just to get pipeline capacity to take their supplies.

IT GETS WORSE

The bearish case gets worse for Canadian gas.  Canadian brokerage firm First Energy is reporting that production in western Canada–which has been coming down by close to 1 BCF/D for the past few years–is now actually up 0.65 BCF/D over last November’s rate.

And RBN Energy just completed a two part series on how ethane prices in the US have been crushed due to over-production, especially in Texas.  Ethane is a Natural Gas Liquid (NGL) that gets produced along with regular “dry” natural gas (which is called methane).  Ethane is the feedstock for ethylene, which is used in anti-freeze in car engines.

RBN estimates that within two years close to 1 BCF/D of ethane will be rejected by industry, and just put back into the regular dry gas stream. Because it has an 80% higher heat content than methane, it actually displaces more gas than 1:1- which means the purchaser can buy a lot less gas!

One bullish bit of information is that Alberta gas storage could be under 300 BCF soon, with a cold November already in the books.  Alberta is normally around 425 BCF now–300 BCF normally doesn’t happen until February, putting the province three months behind its five year seasonal average.

So where does this all end?

If Macquarie’s scenario plays out, many operators (and possibly entire regions) with high cost production may have to shut in production at least on a temporary basis sometime in 2015.

This will take some supply out of the system. Until the Marcellus peaks in production, Canadian producers could be forced to accept gas prices so low it’s not economic for them to produce.  That could usher in a wave of consolidations that could be very profitable for nimble investors.

+Keith Schaefer

You Want to Know How to Time Energy Stocks?

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Opportunity Is Knocking In The Energy Sector – Are You Prepared To Answer?

On July 8, 2014 I made an incredibly prescient investment decision. I didn’t know it at the time, but it was a huge moment in my investment career.

That decision is documented in this e-mail that I sent to my subscriber base….

My sense is that commodity prices have peaked for now—both oil and natural gas.  When I was a younger man, I used to believe my stockpicking was so good my stocks could withstand the Market—after all, I have the best growth stocks on the board.

Yeah, right.

Age has taught me 75% of stocks go up and down with the Market, (as does the number of my subscribers) and even though I DO have good stocks, they follow trends.

So…

1…..Being as I love to sell stock anyway

2…..Being as I think commodity prices have a short to medium term peak here

3…..When seniors drop 10%, juniors drop 30%

4…..It’s summer

5…..I’m in decent-to-big profit positions on some of these stocks

I’m taking profits…….
Sometimes you are lucky, and sometimes you are good. I don’t know which one describes my decision to begin liquidating almost my entire portfolio starting on July 8, 2014……

And I don’t really care.

Because I avoided a once-in-a-decade meltdown and so did the subscribers who followed my lead.

crude oil

I rode the market up through the peak at the end of June and started cashing out when I saw the writing on the wall.

And it gets better….

I get to take all that cash that I’ve been sitting on and invest it into incredible profit opportunities.

I’m now sitting on the biggest war chest of cash that I’ve ever had in my life and I’m staring at opportunities that I couldn’t have imagined six months ago.

Stocks that were selling for $10 in June are now under $5. Stocks that were at $5 are under $2.

And it isn’t just the stock prices of the second tier companies that have been hammered.

Junior oil players with some of the best assets in North America are now selling for a fraction of what they were six months ago.

These are companies that are sitting on land in plays that have the best economics in the business; oil plays that make money and allow companies to grow even $70 oil.

The market is in panic mode. Great companies are being sold off just as heavily as marginal companies. Whether margin calls are forcing this selling or if it is just raw, unbridled fear…. I don’t know.

Again, I don’t care….I just know I’ve got an incredible opportunity coming my way.

CLICK HERE to move on this right now.

I love having all this cash. I’ve been spending night and day figuring out which opportunities I’m going to jump on and exactly when the best time to do it will be.

I’ve created a list of the best companies in the industry that I intend to buy in the coming months when the timing is right.

And my subscribers are going to be right there with me when I do.

I rode the market out in the first half of 2014 and started cashing out right at the peak. I’m confident that I’m going to get back in very close to the bottom.

It is in the midst of panics like today where investments can be made that will change lives.

And I’m speaking from experience.

I’ve seen an opportunity like this once before and I jumped on it with both feet. It didn’t just make me a little bit of money….it literally did change my life.

In March 2009 with oil prices hitting $30 per barrel I knew without a doubt that there was one of those “blood in the streets moments” where fortunes could be made in the oil sector.

I wasn’t sure I’d ever see an opportunity like this again, so I didn’t just buy a few oil stocks.

I quit my secure job, opened my portfolio to subscribers and dedicated myself full time to investing in this sector.

My timing could not have been better. From that March 2009 start date when I opened my portfolio to subscribers I’ve found 43 separate triple digit stock winners.

My first pick, Pacific Rubiales, went from $9-$36. My second was Coastal Energy, which went from $2.50-20. Third was Painted Pony, which went from $1.75-$8. The fourth was Tri-Star, which was bought out a month later for a 40% gain.

Now it is time to add a significant number of new multi-bagger wins to that list. I can’t believe that I’m getting another 2009 type opportunity….but here it is.

There’s maximum pessimism, and I’m going to take advantage of it.

I’ve warned my wife to not expect to see me much in the coming months because now is the time to do your homework…..

Now is the time to spend every waking moment finding exactly which companies are going to be the biggest winners from the depths of this panic…

I’ve spent last five plus years dedicated full time to finding the best junior producers and service companies in North America. That puts me in the perfect position, because these junior companies are the ones that have had their stock prices hardest hit.

I know this sector inside and out. I know which companies are going to not only survive a period of low oil prices but will be in a position to thrive as they gobble up assets from the weaker players.

Don’t get me wrong—today is not the time to be jumping in front of the freight train and buying stocks. That time is near, but we aren’t quite there yet.

Now is the time to get ready the list of stocks that you want to buy when that moment comes.

I did a pretty good job of assessing when to get out of the market this summer, and when the moment to aggressively get back in comes I’ll sound the bell for my subscribers.

I’ve recently updated my full company reports on 3 of the very best junior oil producers and am ready to share them with you.

 

These are 3 of the companies that I know I’m doing to buy when that critical moment comes. I’m just waiting for the precise moment to do so. You can get a free look at these reports now.

Opportunity is knocking. Oil prices aren’t going to stay at this level forever. Futures prices are already pointing to $80/barrel. There are billions and billions of people in the emerging world that consume more oil every day.

I don’t know if this current dip is going to last for two months or a year, but I do know that every year the world consumes roughly a million barrels of oil more than it did before. And global oil production naturally declines about 6%–that’s over four million NEW barrels a day that must be found and put on production every year.

The current state of oversupply is going to disappear.

The question isn’t if oil prices will rebound, the question is when.

I’ve been working up to this moment full time for almost six years. I’ve got the research already prepared for you and I have more ideas coming.

Everyone knows opportunity is knocking in the energy sector. Let me help you focus in on the very best of those opportunities.

Now is the time to act, and you should start with my free report on what I think are the best three junior companies in this market.

Oil doesn’t have to go up for these stocks to go up. Sentiment is so negative and uncertainty so high, that oil just has to stop dropping for these stocks to get a big lift up. I consider these the stocks where the easy money gets made as oil settles into a new price range.

Learn about them NOW; don’t let the Market catch you by surprise and leave you longing for profit.

+Keith Schaefer

The Oil Price is All About ONE Number Right Now

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There is only ONE number in the oil price saga that’s important to investors. It’s the same number the Saudis are tracking.

That is: how much did US oil production increase in the last week.

That number is released every Wednesday morning at 10:30 EST in the weekly EIA (US Energy Information Administration) put out by the US government.

Investors can find that data right here—the direct link is:
Weekly US Oil Production Increase

just scroll down to the bottom or click on the excel file.

The global oil price will have its biggest 30 minute move of the week right at 10:30 am right then—both the international Brent benchmark and the US domestic WTI (West Texas Intermediate) price.

Why is this number so important?

Because it’s very clear in Saudi communications they want to put a bridle on galloping US oil production.

(Notice I didn’t say OPEC. The Saudis don’t care a whit about other OPEC countries. Members like Nigeria, Algeria, Venezuela are either so corrupt or so unable to cut production that the Saudis ignore them—as they should.)

The Saudis are watching this US production number like a hawk—as they should.

The unbridled oil production growth in the US from the Shale Revolution has disrupted oil flows and prices like nothing else since the OPEC embargo in the early 1970s.

Everyone has seen this chart of US oil production:

us field production

 

That’s a very steep upward curve right now. US oil production is on a RAPID increase. Here’s the excel file from the weekly EIA report, and I added a third column and calculated the weekly change in production for the last few months:

week us oil

There have been a couple times that US production has dropped a couple weeks in a row this year.

For the Market to begin to think the oil price has bottomed, it has to see US production drop AT LEAST THREE weeks in a row.

Only God knows when that might happen.

Improvements in fracking are STILL increasing flow rates per metre drilled—five years after the Shale Revolution really took off.

This is increasing cash flows and reducing break-even costs for tight oil producers.

Exports of US refined products continue to hit new highs—now over 4 million barrels a day.

Personally, I don’t think the Saudis start to collect other OPEC members to talk about cutbacks until the price is low enough that American oil production growth slows down—a lot.

By the way, this number is always a true surprise to the Market.

Gas production can be estimated with pipeline flows (in fact US energy consultant Bentek out of Denver Colorado puts out a daily estimate of US natural gas production) but with the weekly Wednesday morning oil number—there is no way to “game” that number.

What are not-so-relevant numbers?

  1. Overall, all-in costs for oil and gas production. These numbers are great for PhDs, academics or first year college economics students. But for investors they are meaningless. In the short term during a rout like this, there is no bottom—especially with financial derivatives deciding much of the price movement.
  2. The price that various OPEC countries need to balance their budgets. Like I said, the Saudis are the only relevant producer in OPEC and they don’t care about the other countries in the cartel (yet)—so investors need not bother with this statistic either.

EDITORS NOTE–The lower Canadian dollar has shielded close to half the drop in the price of oil. So their cash flows could surprise the Market in early 2015. I have a new report which outlines my Top 3 Juniors that will the biggest and fastest inflows as oil finds a bottom. It’s where the easy money will be–and soon. Click Here to be positioned to profit.

+Keith Schaefer

Is US Oil Production Set to Plummet?

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American oil production is set for a fast pullback, says Chris Theal, founder and CEO of Canadian energy fund Kootenay Capital.

And that has two important implications

  1. America is now the swing producer in the global oil market.
  2. If the bottom in oil prices wasn’t set Nov. 5, it’s very, very close.

“We do think shale will rollover in output and it will be much sooner than most people think,” says Theal. “We could very well see negative week over week contraction in output in the US before the OPEC meeting” on November 27.

The oil rig count in the US has gone down four weeks in a row. It will be interesting to see how this shows up in the Wednesday EIA report on overall US production. Only 13 of the 42 weeks in 2014 so far have shown drops in US production.

Theal and his team went back through weekly production data in the US starting after 2011—when tight oil production really took off.

He says the data is more conclusive in the three instances when WTI fell below $85 a barrel; US output fell up to 200,000 barrels a day in literally a span of eight weeks—from a much lower production base than now.

“If you see an initial roll in US output in the next few weeks it will be a major piece of data that the market will notice. The mentality is so negative that I think if you get some bullish data point like that you can see a fairly aggressive reversal” in oil pricing, Theal says.

“If you get another drop in the rig count this week and a reversal in output—that’s an instantaneous measurement of the Saudi objective.”

Umm…and..what’s the Saudi objective?

“Just put a governor on the pace of growth.”

Here’s why he expects such a quick turn-down in US production:

Producers in almost all the major oil basins in the US receive a discount to WTI. So they are receiving even less cash flow than many investors might think.

chart1

Bakken prices are $8/barrel below WTI, which closed at $78.68 Thursday. And that’s what the oil marketers get. Producers get a $1-$4/barrel below that as their field price—so that’s about $70/barrel or even a bit less.

Theal says that realized price equals about a 10% return for industry—not enough. In fact, he estimates that the Top 5 North Dakota Bakken producers—Continental, Whiting, Oasis, Northern and Kodiak—have seen 2015 cash flow estimates fall by $870 million since oil prices dropped in the summer. That’s $870 million that won’t be going into the ground over the coming months.

And with the high declines in tight oil production, the impact of that should be immediate.

So that’s the immediacy of dollars that aren’t getting reinvested in the ground. The chart above uses a term called “Instantaneous Declines” which is how fast production would drop if ALL drilling in each basin stopped tomorrow.

Of course, that is not going to happen, but Theal says that chart should give the Market an understanding of how much high-and-fast declines there are from “flush” production in the USA right now. Flush production is that high initial flow rate that falls off rapidly—65% or so—in the first year before flattening out to a 30%, then 25% then 20% declines in the following years.

On their quarterly conference calls this week, several US producers were being very cautious about growth plans. Talisman (TLM-NYSE/TSX) said it would cut 2015 capex by $200 million. Rosetta Resources (ROSE-NASD) lowered spending by 20% and cut growth forecasts from 30% to 17-26%. Comstock Resources (CRK-NYSE) said it was committed to living within cash flow in 2015—which should mean a cutback in spending as their $510 million capex budget is $95 million more than estimated cash flows.

Small cap Bakken operator Emerald Oil (EOX-NYSE) said it would drop a rig if oil prices stay sub $80/barrel.

With the Saudis allegedly being firmly committed to keeping their production and market share up, that makes the high cost producer the swing producer—as logic would dictate they would cut back production first.

That would be the USA, with its shale production. How does having a market based swing producer differ from when and how the Saudis managed the oil supply demand balance?

“I think it makes a strong case for upside volatility being less pronounced; the oil price is now somewhat capped outside of geopolitical issues,” Theal says.

“There is a governor on how high it can go because at some price shale grows aggressively—like at $100/barrel.  Everybody and their brother is drilling plays that can make hurdle rate economics at that level.

He has already begun buying a basket of Canadian junior and intermediate light oil producers. If light oil does move higher, he doesn’t think it’s going to back to $100/barrel—which means investors increasingly need to avoid producers that require high oil prices to make their growth and/or dividend models work.“I think there are a lot of businesses that rely on $100 crude…divco’s and their models don’t work at these prices.”

+Keith Schaefer

The Only Oil Price Going UP in the World Right Now

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Here’s a current chart of the oil price you probably don’t recognize:

chart1

This is a custom built chart of Canadian heavy oil prices (Western Canada Select–WCS)—in Canadian dollars. (Canadian dollar charts are hard to find!).  This chart takes into account the lower Canadian dollar against the greenback.  It shows that heavy oil producers aren’t hurting—in fact, they’re getting some of the best prices ever in the last five years.

But that hasn’t helped their share prices. Oilsands and heavy oil producers have seen their stocks drop 30% or more in the last few weeks—the same as everyone else.

The weak Canadian dollar shielded just under half the drop in oil prices for producers in the Great White North.

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At the start of 2013 the Canadian dollar was at par with its American counterpart.  What that meant was that for every US dollar of barrel sold Canadian producers received one Canadian dollar.  Today one US dollar is now worth $1.125 Canadian.  If WCS prices are at $70 US per barrel that means that heavy oil producers would receive $78 Canadian.

But the other reason for the strength in heavy oil is strong demand and better access to market. That is reducing the discount that heavy oil prices get around North America.

It could mean that heavy oil stocks are the best place for energy investors…but not yet.  There is no emotion in upstream E&Ps until the oil price finds a bottom.  And only God and Allah know when that will be.

But stronger demand for heavy oil should be a long term trend.

Investors hear all the time about the Shale Revolution—but that’s high quality light oil.  But the US refinery complex has been moving to produce more lower quality heavy oil for a decade. Just this year, BP’s Whiting Indiana refinery finished  switching from 70%  light oil to 70% heavy oil—despite being so close to Bakken light oil in North Dakota.

Until tight (or shale) oil became economic, the crude slate the world over was getting heavier.  And the oils are so different that you can’t put light oil in a heavy oil refinery and make much money.

But US refineries also want heavy Canadian crude for economic reasons—it has been VERY cheap in the last few years.  Another way the industry says this is—WCS has a big discount to WTI, or West Texas Intermediate, the US light oil benchmark price set in Cushing OK.

Heavy oil should have a discount because it costs more to refine than light oil—the “heavy” in heavy oil means asphalt and other products are in the oil and have to be removed (they get used for paving roads across North America).

But refineries are more concerned  about the discount from Brent—the international benchmark price out of London England.  All the refined products like gasoline get sold on Brent pricing (or whatever benchmark is highest at the time).

As fast growing production from the Shale Revolution overwhelmed US refineries in 2011-2013, the WTI price dropped from even with Brent to $20/barrel below!  But increased refinery runs, refinery expansions and crude exports to Canada have brought that down to a $2/barrel Brent-WTI discount lately.

Second, Canadian heavy oil typically trades at a discount to WTI.  In the last two years a lack of pipeline capacity has led to that discount blowing out to as much as $40 per barrel at times–as you see on the chart below.  During the last two Decembers, Canadian heavy oil producers got no Christmas presents as they were selling oil as low as $58/barrel!

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Source of graph data: Alberta Office of Statistics

It’s easy for that Canadian dollar chart of heavy oil to go up when it starts at low prices like that.

Thanks to oil by rail, that discount has stabilized at much lower levels in 2014 and is now at its lowest levels in recent memory.The Market is predicting that the WCS “differential”, or discount, will stay low.  Current strip pricing shows the WCS discount going from under $15 today to around $20 by the end of 2015 and staying there longer term.

Crude-by-rail will continue to be key for heavy oil as more pipeline capacity has become so political. Few people could see how quickly rail has rescued heavy oil producers.

Rail uploading capacity in Canada is now 600,000 barrels per day.  That is expected to nearly double to 1.1 million barrels per day by the end of 2015.

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There has been a lot of positive news for WCS pricing just in the last week:

  • Phillips 66 (PSX-NYSE) said the supply of Mexican heavy oil, called the Maya blend, is being reduced into the Gulf Coast.  This is Canada’s major competitor in the Gulf Coast Refinery Complex.  They are looking for more Canadian heavy crude.
  • Phillips is also building a 30,000 bopd transloading facility at its Ferndale WA refinery, just south of the Canadian border, to take more crude by rail.
  • International energy consulting firm PIRA said in their September MidContinent Oil Forecast that Enbridge’s Flanagan South pipeline from Illinois to Cushing is now being filled with heavy oil, which will reduce the regular seasonal discount for heavy oil this year.
    • This is potentially very good news, and long lasting news for heavy oil producers. Railing crude from western Canada is roughly $17-$18/barrel. But if half that distance can now be piped–from Chicago down to the Gulf–then the overall blended transport cost to all those heavy-crude hungry Gulf Coast refineries is more like $10-$11/barrel.  It’s potentially a huge structural change in the heavy oil market.
  • Marathon (MPC-NYSE) is considering “potential commercial opportunities” for its 1.2 million bopd Capline pipeline, which starts in Louisiana and ships oil north to Midwest refineries near Chicago.  The obvious option is to reverse it north-to-south and get more cheap WCS barrels to the Gulf Coast.  (Then Keystone really becomes meaningless for a few years).  Management said there is big demand for Canadian crude in the Louisiana refining corridor—“a lot of volume that could go that direction someday.”
  • Marathon added that by the fourth quarter, the WCS-WTI differential is expected to narrow to the mid- teens – approaching Gulf Coast refiner parity with Maya, adjusted for transportation costs and quality.

Another big factor increasing profitability for heavy oil producers is lower condensate prices.  Condensate is a very light oil that is used to dilute the gooey heavy oil so it flows better in pipelines.  In Canada it usually trades $3-$5 above the Canadian light oil price, called Edmonton Par.  Condensate trades lock-in-step with light oil, so it is down 25% to $76/barrel since July.  That reduced blending cost goes directly to increased netback–profit per barrel–for heavy oil producers.

The conclusion here is that market forces are actually raising Canadian heavy oil prices AND lowering costs—completely against the grain of every other hydrocarbon in North America. Despite all the volatility, heavy oil producers continue to generate cash flows ABOVE their 2014 budgets.

It’s counterintuitive, and it could be a huge opportunity for investors—but when?

+Keith Schaefer

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