Lawmakers in West Virginia Have Resumed Work on Marcellus Legislation

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Legislation has recently been drafted that would alter the process of hiring inspectors and increase discussion related to drilling operations. These new rules would be set forth in amendments to West Virginia's constitution that were approved on Monday September 12 by a special House-Senate committee, according to The Associated Press.

The original draft proposal was modified on that day to eliminate the state's Oil and Gas Inspectors' Examining Board. The board currently supplies an examination that applicants must pass in order to become inspectors and then creates a list of qualified candidates, The Associated Press reports.

James Martin, the chief of the Oil and Gas office at the Department of Environmental Protection, told lawmakers, "The main concern here is to have the best inspectors in the field that we can have," according to the media outlet.

He added that, "I just want to make it perfectly clear, because when we eliminate this board, we won't know what we're going to have."

The proposed amendment would put the responsibility of qualifying inspectors in the hands of the state Division of Personnel, The Associated Press reports. Legislative auditors have stated that the division handles tasks like these and the Examining Board has been missing a member for many years.  

U.S. Exploration and Production Company Crimson Exploration Continues Drilling in Eagle Ford Shale

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Junior exploration and production company Crimson Exploration (CXPO:NASDAQ) announced Monday that it has started production of two wells in the Eagle Ford Shale.

The Littlepage McBride #2H started production at a gross rate of 1,030 Boepd (952 Bopd and 465 Mcfpd) using 2,700 psi of flowing tubing pressure. The site that was drilled had a total measured depth of 16,174 feet, which included a 4,200 foot lateral, Upstream reports. This well belongs to a set of four wells that exist in the area, including a well that has been producing since April and two that are in progress.

The KM Ranch #1H well was drilled to a total measured depth of 12,627 feet, which included a 5,800 foot lateral. Fracing the well required 20 stages and then flow back operations commenced. This well yielded gross production of 418 boepd with a 20/64” choke and 397 psi of flowing casing pressure, according to the media outlet.

Crimson Exploration plans to begin drilling its first well in the Dimmit County area and other two in Zavala County, the media outlet reports. The company plans to spud its first Woodbine well in Madison County by November at the latest.  

Dundee Securities Initiates Buy rating and Target Share Price for Wild Stream Exploration

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Investment bank Dundee Securities recently began covering Wild Stream Exploration (WSX:TSXV) and provided it with a Buy rating and a target share price of C$14.50. The company has reached a 52-week high/low of C$12.70 and C$6.43. It closed Sept 14 at $10.28.

The most recent asset acquisition in the Shaunavon and Dodsland plays in southwest Saskatchewan increased production by 1,800 boe/d to more than 5,000 boe/d, a 50 percent increase. Wild Stream is also engaged in secondary recovery schemes in both the Viking oil formations.

Dundee's target share price for Wild Stream was based on various factors including the management team's history of building value in similar organizations, the potential for the company's drilling programs to increase share price by more than 50 percent over their current value and plans to produce more oil from already existing operations. 

Raymond James Downgrades Geokinetics to Market Perform from Outperform Following Mexico Accident

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Financial services firm Raymond James announced on September 13 that it is reluctantly downgrading Geokinetics Inc. (GOK:AMEX) to Market Perform from Outperform based on a recent accident in Mexico which caused at least three deaths. The company's balance sheet is highly leveraged, and its future ability to generate profit is largely dependent on Mexico, which creates a tenuous situation.

It was reported the week of September 5 that a liftboat working for the company was damaged by Tropical Storm Nate, according to the financial services firm. All 10 crew members that were onboard left the ship for a lifeboat. Immediately afterwards, a search and rescue mission was launched to find the boat. The boat was found on the morning on September 11, and it was reported that six crew members were reported to have survived. One crew member was still missing at the time of report.

Dow Jones Newswires reports that the captain's last communication advised that the crew was planning on abandoning the lifeboat at noon on Thursday, after which all correspondence was blocked by weather conditions. The crew that experienced this ordeal included three independent contractors, four Trinity crewmen and three employees of Geokinetics.  

Ithaca Energy Stock: When Will Production Growth Get Priced In?

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When will Ithaca’s production growth start to get priced into its stock?

This junior North Sea oil producer is set to double production to 10,000 bopd late 2011, when its Athena project (Ithaca 22%, and operator) will come onstream.

I would expect some speculative premium to start developing in the stock in advance, as the technical and financial risk is – IMHO – gone, but CEO Iain McKendrick says The Street is telling him differently.

“Ithaca is a small company at $400 million market cap putting a large field into production as operator.  We did do the same at the Jacky field but it was smaller in scale.  So The Street may wait until first oil–‘seeing is believing'” — he told me in a recent interview.

“The Street says – ‘you’re a development company.’  The Street says ‘I don’t understand cost overrun risk and timing risk.  Exploration risk has great reward–we can understand that.  Production we can value on cash flow multiples and see what the numbers are.  But development…we don’t understand all the risks.’  The Street says once Athena is onstream they can put an Earnings Per Share ratio on it.”

Kevin Shaw is a former sell side analyst who covered Ithaca.  He says “Ithaca, in my opinion, is as low risk as you can get in the offshore space,” but he understands market sentiment:

“Production performance–post start-up of a new field– can either surprise to the upside or underperform.  New, high quality conventional reservoirs require real engineering and reservoir / production optimization over time.”

Few junior oil stocks have generated more analyst and media commentary this year than Ithaca Energy (IAE-TSX).  I have owned the stock for a year, with the reasoning that the company is unique in the junior oilpatch in that it has discovered enough oil and gas to more than quintuple production in the next two years to 24,000 bopd, and has raised all the money to do it. It doesn’t need to finance.

History says that growth profile and cash position should make for a premium valuation—certainly on a domestic, (North American) onshore asset it would.  Yet Ithaca is, by estimates from Macquarie Capital, trading at 2x current annualized cash flow (once you subtract $120 million cash) and 1.5x their 2012 estimated cash flow of $330 million.   The latest BMO Nesbitt Burns weekly “comp sheet” shows the junior international producers trading at a median of 3.7x 2012 estimated cash flow.

If Ithaca could ever bridge THAT valuation gap, it would be a huge win for shareholders. So far, it has been elusive.

Here is a chart from a recent Macquarie report showing how cheap Ithaca is compared to its peer group, based on cash flow multiple.

ithaca production

I’m also guessing that The Street is looking at production numbers, which were down from 4,552 bopd in H1 2010 to 1,876 bopd for H1 2011 – almost exclusively due to downtime at Ithaca’s Jacky field, where the ESPs (Electric Submersible Pumps; underwater pumps) had to be replaced.   This caused Ithaca to have a rare quarterly loss in its most recent financial statements.  And management did miss on their last Jacky well when they were certain they were going to hit.

Despite the fact that Jacky is now back onstream at even better rates than before, it brought to mind the risk that problems can happen offshore and they’re time consuming to fix.  In this market environment, investors are now looking for things that can go wrong with companies and stocks, not with what’s right.

I even had one analyst warn me that a low valuation won’t save the stock in a market downturn.  He said the high capital cost projects run by juniors will always be perceived as high risk ventures, despite the project being almost ready to come onstream and all funding in place.  In other words, the stock could get even cheaper if the oil price goes lower.

And as McKendrick says, Ithaca is a small company putting a big asset into production.  With most of the undersea pipelines (the “spaghetti”) and well equipment now being installed, the two major risks remaining for getting Ithaca’s Athena asset into production are:

1.   The Boat – the Floating Storage and Offloading Vessel (FPSO) that is now under conversion in Dubai, and when complete in October will spend 15 days at sea getting to the North Sea.  It could theoretically sink (I guess).  And McKendrick says getting 650 men working day and night to make sure all the pieces work together there (including putting on 300 miles of cabling) is a logistical challenge.

2.   Weather—North Sea starts to get rough in the fall through the winter.

3.   Despite much testing, the wells at Athena might not perform as expected.  Nobody really expects that to happen, but it’s a possibility.

McKendrick explains the testing that has been done on 3 of the production wells, and how the four production wells and one injector well at Athena will ramp up production to 22,000 boe.

“With regard to reservoir risk, our tests have all had the same consistency.  We have already done production tests without ESPs (Electric Submersible Pumps; sub-sea pump jacks) on three of the four wells.  I feel 100% we will be getting up to our full 22,000 boe initial rate.”

He says that when Athena begins production, “Each well will start off in sequence. We’ll start well 1 at 50%, then 2 and 3 and 4, and make sure they’re running together, and the oil is co-mingling together. We do that for awhile and then boost up production to 100% over 24 days or so.”

Shaw says “They’ve got as much appraisal data for Athena as they need.  They’ve scienced it as much as possible within what is considered a reasonable cost level for discovery & appraisal work.”

McKendrick adds that from his point of view, the real risk becomes apparent later – “The decline rate on Athena is 20% in Year 1—if you start to see it decline more than that then you get concerned.”

Now, not only does Ithaca have the money in the bank to develop Athena, they also have the cash/cash flow/debt lines to get their next big discovery – the Greater Stella gas project in the North Sea – into production.  Three separate assets in that play could collectively add 10,000-15,000 boe/d by the end of 2013.

“Christmas trees are ordered (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_tree_%28oil_well%29) and have been announced to the market,” said McKendrick.  “Christmas trees are the longest lead item on the project.  We will select the concept of project next month, and announce that in late Oct, when we are ready to start getting contracts, like the Front End Engineering & Development (FEED) contract.  We will award the drilling contract on a turnkey basis vs a dayrate basis, giving us one price.  We prefer a contract on those terms.”

The last public guidance management gave for Ithaca’s share of the capex for Stella was $370 million, but McKendrick said that will become more firm later this fall when the final field development plan (FDP)  for Stella is announced in December 2011. With $120 million cash, $140 million untapped debt and $300 million 2012 cash flow, Ithaca can internally fund this.

I confess that in 2010 and early 2011 I was bearish on medium-long term European gas prices (the #1 reason I missed the beautiful run by Realm Energy (RLM-TSXv), but the Japanese earthquake and tsunami that swamped their nuclear facilities have changed that.

I thought one of the reasons The Street was a bit nervous on Ithaca is because Athena is their last major OIL asset to come into production.  The market just didn’t see Greater Stella’s dry natural gas as SEXY as oil, and that could impact its valuation.  But now valuation is (I hope) rock bottom, and McKendrick says gas is the future fuel of Europe.

“Winter gas prices are now over $10/mmcf, and spot is now $8.70/mmcf.   As Europe gets greener, its consumption of gas increases.  Coal fired plants are being shut down and there are no new-builds ongoing.”The Japanese earthquake took German nuclear out and the UK is building no more nuclear.  Gas is becoming the fuel of choice for Europe and the UK.  Europe is mopping up Qatar supply.

“And why is Russia not supplying gas into Europe?  Because its supplies are going back into their own country, their domestic market.  And Russia just signed a huge deal with China, where China will pay for gas lines through Russia to China.  I’m particularly bullish on gas prices in Europe from late 2012 onwards as the economies also recover.”

Whenever I talk with management, I always ask them these two open-ended questions, among others:

1.   What if anything is there that you think that the analysts who are covering your company are not paying enough attention to?  Here’s what McKendrick had to say:  “Analysts haven’t worked out what our tax loss pools really mean, and how it will grow—it grew again this quarter as we continue to develop assets and pour capital into the North Sea.” He says there are four years of tax loss pools available to Ithaca now.

2.   What do you feel is the most under-appreciated aspect of your company by investors? McKendrick had no hesitation: “(It’s our) Risk profile. Ithaca has a strategic partner across all its assets—Dyas. Dyas is a private Dutch company with 30,000 boe/d production. They are strong financially and experienced technically. Having them as a partner means risk mitigation. Dyas is putting up as much or more money than us. Dyas is the Oil and Gas arm of SHV, the biggest private Dutch industrial conglomerate.”

In conclusion, the negatives against Ithaca are:

  • The perceived increased taxes (now 62% of gross income) by the UK government.
  • Ithaca being a small company putting a big asset into production, and high capex projects being seen as high risk.
  • The market not knowing how to price in development risk.
  • Company-wide production being cut in half year over year.
  • A negative overall market.

And that is balanced against current production of around 5,000 boepd, (counting the latest acquisition of Cook which closed in August) with another 5,000 bopd oil production coming onstream in December.  2012 operating costs are expected to be roughly $30/barrel, meaning cash flow per barrel could be close to $80 on current $112/bbl Brent pricing, and profit per barrel (the netback) at $50—both are very high, profitable numbers.

So despite a low risk, high-build in production within three months, and a very low valuation on all metrics, Ithaca’s stock remains firmly under the thumb of a nervous market.

Shaw, for one, is not concerned.

“The Ithaca team has done a great job at putting themselves in a position to turn a new major offshore field every 12-15 months… that is execution in a big way for offshore oil & gas.”

“Their challenge is to get up to 15,000 bopd and then someone will be interested in buying them, whether it’s the Koreans or Chinese or the Tullows of the world.  That’s the name of the game.”

“Any company producing 10,000 to 15,000 bopd and getting $112 Brent pricing, will attract the attention of others. Ithaca is getting more attractive by the day on that front.”

The Athena countdown is on.

Surge Energy Discovers Well that Yields 2,000 boe/d

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Surge Energy (SGY:TSVX) recently announced that it has drilled a horizontal well located at Valhalla South in Western Alberta which yielded five-day test rates of 1,992 barrels of oil equivalent per day.

The well, which is the company's fifth in the Valhalla South Doig light oil pool, is now completed. Drilling the well required getting through 820 meters of Doig Formation and nine frac stages which averaged 30 tonnes of proppant per frac.

The results of this drilling illustrates the high quality of the light oil that exist in Valhalla, with the last three wells drilled having IP rates over 1,400 boe/d, investment bank Dundee Securities reports. Surge drilled the sixth well last month with plans to tie the well in during Q4.

The investment bank announced on September 13 that it was reaffirming its BUY rating, Top Pick ranking and C$12.00 target price for the oil and gas company. The company's stock opened at C$9.00 on September 13 after closing at C$8.80 the previous day. The stock hit a 52-week low of C$5.23 and rose to a 52-week high of C$10.45.  

Gran Tierra and Partner Petrogas Discover Oil Resource in Argentina

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Calgary-based Gran Tierra Energy (GTE:TSX) and its co-venturer Petrogas (BOE:TSXV) announced their discovery of a significant supply of oil in the Neuquen Basin of Argentina on September 12.

The oil and gas they found existed in one of the three exploration wells on the Rinconada Norte block which is located in the Basin. Test runs performed on the oil discovered have produced approximately 944 barrels of oil equivalent per day and around 13,360 cubic meters per day of gas, which is equal to 79 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Using the depth of the wells tested and electric logs information, Petrogas estimated the oil column thickness to be 197 feet or roughly 60 meters.

Equity research firm Macquarie Equities Research recently rated Gran Tierra Energy as OUTPERFORM and provided its target stock price for the company of $C5.87. Gran Tierra opened at C$5.80 on September 12 after closing at C$5.87 the previous day. The company has hit a 52-week low of C$5.00 and reached a 52-week high of C$9.37.  

Skepticism About Size of U.S. Natural Gas Reserves is Without Basis

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While several industry insiders have questioned the current perception that domestic oil production in the United States is thriving, a recent Forbes column argues that this skepticism is without basis.

The column is written specifically in response to a New York Times story stating that companies are inflating the size of existing reserves and the productivity of the wells they are drilling. Forbes asserts the United States is experiencing record production of natural gas and is on track to produce 27 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in 2011.

Extracting oil and gas from U.S. developments has just started, according to the media outlet. Natural gas is available in such abundance that certain companies like Cheniere Energy have received approval to start exporting it.

The New York Times article contends that extracting gas from the shale formations is more expensive than the companies involved make it seem. Forbes asks why drillers would invest so much money in their operations with receiving a return. The skeptics contend that companies overstate the amount of oil existing in the United States. However, The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated that the Bakken formation holds between 3 billion and 4.3 billion barrels of oil.