- The Kinder Morgan Buyout Message
- How Healthy is China’s Oil Demand?
- OPEC Struggles With a Well Supplied Market
- An Upside Revision to Energy Demand Growth
- Upcoming Natural Gas Price Crash Predicted
- Nigerian Kidnapping Sends Chill Through The Oil Industry
- Energy Bits
Note: Musings from the Oil Patch reflects an eclectic collection of stories and analyses dealing with issues and developments within the energy industry that I feel have potentially significant implications for executives operating oilfield service companies. The newsletter currently anticipates a semi-monthly publishing schedule, but periodically the event and news flow may dictate a more frequent schedule. As always, I welcome your comments and observations. Allen Brooks
The Kinder Morgan Buyout Message
On May 29, Wall Street was surprised by the announcement from Kinder Morgan, Inc. (KMI-NYSE) that its management, along with several directors and a group of private equity funds, had made an offer to buy the company and take it private. The transaction is valued at about $21.8 billion based on equity of $7.3 billion and debt, new and assumed, of about $14.5 billion. This would represent the second largest management buyout after the 1989 purchase of RJR Nabisco by private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts in a $25 billion deal.
The cash purchase price of $100 per share offered for Kinder Morgan represented an 18.5% premium over the closing price of the shares on May 26. More important, it approximates the price at which the shares traded briefly in January of this year, which represented an all-time high. Following disclosure of the offer, the shares traded above the offer-price reflecting investor and analyst views that a higher bid might be forthcoming from a competitor, or a higher purchase price could be negotiated by the special committee of Kinder Morgan’s board. Prices in the $105-$110 range have been suggested as being potentially the final transaction value range.
Kinder Morgan is headed by Rich Kinder. In our view, one of the smartest energy investors out there. Kinder was a key management partner with Ken Lay in the early days of building Enron Corp. Kinder left Enron in 1997 when he was not selected president, essentially losing a power struggle over the company’s direction. Kinder teamed up with partner Bill Morgan and brought with him about $40 million of Enron Products pipeline assets he secured as part of his separation from Enron. This was one of the early and key assets in the construction of Kinder Morgan. A major transforming event for the company was the merger of Kinder Morgan with KN Energy, Inc., a significant pipeline company, in October 1997.
Today, Kinder Morgan is one of the largest midstream energy companies in
Kinder is being joined in the bid by co-founder Bill Morgan, current directors Fayez Sarofim and Mike Morgan, and senior management. Additionally, private equity funds and affiliates of GS Capital Partners, AIG Global Investment Group, The Carlyle Group and Riverstone Holdings are helping to provide the equity required to finance the transaction. The bidding group also has received a “highly confident” letter from Goldman Sachs Credit Partners, L.P. that it can raise the $14.5 billion in funded indebtedness that is part of the financing package.
The conventional view on Wall Street is that this buyout represents an opportunistic move by Kinder, et al, to capitalize on a miss-priced stock. There have been suggestions made on numerous business shows by energy analysts and M&A specialists that they would expect Kinder Morgan to return to the public market within the next two years at a favorable gain for the private shareholders. We take a contrary view and believe that the fundamentals underlying this transaction have important messages for energy investors.
First, and it goes without saying, Kinder and his management team will be out from under the public microscope. Since the company may still have some public debt, it will not be relieved of Sarbanes Oxley and periodic filing requirements, but quarterly earnings calls and investor presentations will be a thing of the past. Second and possibly much more important for management, Kinder Morgan will not have to worry about playing the quarterly earnings game with Wall Street. How to build an energy company while making sure not to disappoint analysts and investors with earnings shortfalls is a tremendous undertaking.
For a smart, long-term energy investor, not being in the public arena, as long as the company has access to capital, provides him much greater flexibility in building a company. As a private company, Kinder will be able to make bets on energy market trends with significant long-term earnings potential that otherwise might create immediate earnings dilution. We think this flexibility is a major motivating factor behind the bid to take Kinder Morgan private, especially when we look at who will be partnering with Rich Kinder. The directors and senior managers are long-term energy participants. But more significant is that the private equity firms are all knowledgeable and experienced energy investors with substantial capital funds available to contribute in future transactions.
Another consideration in the transaction is the underlying view of energy markets and North American opportunities. We believe that Kinder Morgan’s two most recent significant investments suggest that Rich Kinder believes energy markets are entering a period of significant restructuring. This restructuring will impact both the domestic energy business, and international markets, too. Let’s take a look at these two moves.
Last year, Kinder Morgan purchased Canadian based Terasen Inc., a pipeline transportation, natural gas retail distribution business and a water company. The water company was subsequently sold as its business did not fit Kinder Morgan’s business model or expertise. The retail gas distribution business serves customers in
As oil sands volumes increase, more pipeline capacity will be needed to move the production to the
The Terasen oil pipelines come down from the oil sands and conventional oil producing regions of Western Canada into the western states of the
The impact of $70 per barrel oil has stimulated substantial oil drilling and growing output in the Rocky Mountain states of
capacity and it lacks adequate refineries, which has contributed to a sharp price discount for this new oil supply. Within the past several months, crude oil in
Exhibit 1. Kinder Morgan Assets
Source: Kinder Morgan
The second big investment move by Kinder Morgan is its joint venture with Sempra Energy (SRA-NYSE) to build the Rockies Express Pipeline to move natural gas output from
A critical consideration about increased gas output from the
The problem for unconventional gas is that these resources require more challenging drilling and specific completion techniques that make the plays more sensitive to gas prices. At the present time, unconventional gas resources are producing about 8 Bcf/d of gas supply and growing. The challenge is how fast we can open up additional unconventional gas resources that are scattered across the
Exhibit 2. Unconventional Gas Production
Source: EIA
IHS believes that current high natural gas prices have stimulated aggressive drilling. They point to a declining trend in per well average output, along with rising drilling costs that they estimate are rising at anywhere from 8% to 25% per year, as signs of the problem in counting on this resource to solve our domestic gas shortfall. IHS suggests that the future for known unconventional gas plays is not particularly bright. They believe that coal bed methane (CBM) production possibly reached a plateau in late 2004. They point to declining new well drilling activity in the
Exhibit 3.
Source: EIA
example of this CBM plateau. IHS projects that fractured shale plays possibly may plateau in 2008 while tight gas sands plays could plateau in 2007. This outlook fits with CERA’s view that based on current drilling trends, by 2010
Exhibit 4.
Source: EIA
Exhibit 5.
Source: EIA
The significance of CERA’s analysis is that
A final aspect of the move to take Kinder Morgan private may be the timing. Why now? We believe the answer is that Rich Kinder believes energy markets are overly bullish and are poised for a fall. An energy market correction could come from any set of events. Fundamentally, the global supply of both crude oil and natural gas appears adequate, and more than enough to push prices lower. A commodity price correction will cause energy equity prices to retreat. This correction could present significant investment opportunities for Kinder Morgan, especially if it doesn’t have to justify the near-term earnings impact to Wall Street. Being a private company with sophisticated investor partners would give Kinder Morgan the ability to make acquisitions that would create a more powerful and profitable company in the future, even if it hurt earnings in the near-term.
To us, the message of the Kinder Morgan management buyout is both a statement about the positive long-term outlook for energy markets and the risk of a significant near-term energy market correction. Depending upon your investment time horizon, this message is either good news or bad news. But like energy investing in general, it won’t be boring.
How Healthy Is China’s Oil Demand?
The working assumption for oil market forecasters is that the amazing economic performance record of
Starting in 2005, the Chinese government moved to slow its economic growth by cutting fuel subsidies and restricting exports of refined products. Furthermore, the completion of new electric generating plants reduced the need for power-augmenting portable generators. As a result, oil demand growth in 2005 was substantially lower than 2004, and if one believes the Chinese official statistics, it was flat or down slightly.
Exhibit 6. Chinese Crude Oil Demand
Source: IEA, PPHB
An old concern about the health of the Chinese economy has recently surfaced – bad loans. The issue of nonperforming loans (NPLs) in the Chinese banking industry has been of concern for a number of years. Recently, three reports by international financial firms have been issued, and a fourth issued and subsequently withdrawn, on the health of the Chinese banking system that are raising questions about the country’s future economic challenges.
Mr. George Friedman of Stratfor has just authored an interesting report on the subject. In it he writes: “What is important here is not that
The issued and subsequently withdrawn report was prepared by the international accounting firm of Ernst & Young. The other reports came from PricewaterhouseCoopers, McKinsey Global Institute and Fitch. Reportedly, Moody’s Investor Service also is preparing a report. These reports are critical of the magnitude of the NPL problem and how the Chinese government and its banking system are handling them.
Friedman’s thesis begins with the universal assumption that
Since the key to the Chinese economy is not domestic consumption but exports, the official government policy of cooling its economy creates a serious challenge. The government wants to slow certain sectors where they fear bubbles emerging, but it is also trying to keep the economy hot in order to manage the financial problems. Friedman’s conclusion is that the emergence of this spat of reports on the Chinese banking system’s health, or lack thereof, marks a turning point. He believes the dynamics of the Chinese economy are shifting. “The debt issue represents a deep structural problem that
According to Friedman, “…the huge structural imbalance of
OPEC Struggles with a Well Supplied Market
Just over a week ago, oil ministers representing the members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) assembled in
Chavez stepped into the presidency of
The meeting provided an international stage for the Venezuelan president to expound on his populist ideas about what host producing countries should do to control their resources and extract greater economic rents from the oil and gas companies working there. Chavez has used his position to encourage fellow leftist
leaders of neighboring South American countries to exact greater retribution from the oil and gas companies extracting their resources. Riding this wave of populism, Chavez protégés such as Evo Morales in
Chavez’s political power may be peaking, however, as his support for Ollanta Humala in the recent Peruvian election seems to have assured conservative Alan Garcia’s victory. In Colombia, Chavez arch foe Alvaro Uribe was overwhelming re-elected president, while Chavez was told to butt out of the upcoming Nicaraguan election where he has been supporting former Sandinista leader, Manuel Noriega. While Chavez would like to see leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador defeat National Action Party standard bearer Felipe Calderón, a conservative supported by northern Mexican businessmen, the two are locked in a dead heat in the polls. The third candidate, Roberto Madrazo of the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party), the party of current president Vicente Fox, is trailing. Chavez has been in a vicious feud with Fox.
Despite the surge in global oil prices, which is producing a flood of cash for the Venezuelan government and its national oil company, PdVSA, the country’s oil production still lags its OPEC quota. Speaking before the OPEC meeting, Chavez said that world markets were oversupplied and called for a reduction in OPEC production, which was rejected. OPEC members are more concerned about the impact of continued high oil prices on future oil demand, than trying to boost prices higher by cutting production. They could be in for a price shock should geopolitical events ease or global oil demand fall. In the short term, OPEC members are aware that a number of new major offshore oil fields located in non-OPEC countries will soon begin producing. As a result, the call on OPEC production is expected to fall during the balance of 2006 before climbing in 2007. If high oil prices cause further economic weakening, OPEC’s production will be most at risk to reduced oil demand unless world oil prices decline and stimulate consumption.
What we found most interesting about the OPEC meeting was a statement made by
Another statement from the OPEC meeting reflected on the impact of these high prices on oil demand. According to OPEC’s acting Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo, “There’s no impact from current oil prices on growth.” However, he said that it was unclear what price level would cause the world’s economy to falter.
The day following Bernanke’s speech, which crashed world stock markets because of its concern about accelerating inflation, the U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA) released its latest short-term energy forecast that called for a hike in its demand growth for the second quarter and all of 2006, along with a strong demand increase for 2007. The juxtaposition of the Bernanke and EIA comments suggest that people in
An Upside Revision to Energy Demand Growth
After a number of months of downward reductions in oil demand forecasts, the EIA has countered that trend in its recent (June 2006) short-term energy monthly report. The report, released June 6, calls for an increase in its oil demand forecast for 2006 of 100,000 b/d to an annual gain of 1.7 million b/d, or a 2.0% increase. The EIA has a healthy 1.9 million b/d increase, a gain of 2.2%, penciled in for 2007. The 2007 EIA forecast appears to be essentially flat or very slightly lower than its May forecast. The boost in demand by the EIA puts the agency’s projection well above both OPEC’s and the International Energy Agency’s (IEA’s) latest forecasts. They are projecting annual demand gains of 1.4 million b/d (+1.7%) and 1.25 million b/d (+1.5%) for 2006, respectively.
We were surprised to see this increase projected by the EIA as most economic forecasts are calling for slowing global economic activity, and especially in the
The EIA’s explanation appears to be that its revision of historical demand data for non-OECD countries resulted in its 2004’s demand estimate being raised by 200,000 b/d. The revised demand figures pointed to stronger consumption in the Former Soviet Union and non-OECD Asian countries, excluding
An interesting part of this latest EIA report is its analysis of the impact on
While these volumes are sobering, we should keep in mind that according to the Minerals Management Service (MMS) we have lost 162 million barrels of oil and 784 Bcf of gas as of June 1 from hurricanes Rita and Katrina. This lost oil and gas production is equal to about 30% and 31%, respectively, of a normal year of output from Federal offshore production. Also keep in mind, as we wrote in our last issue, that given the current volume of natural gas in storage and assuming normal summer temperatures, we have sufficient gas to absorb a similar loss in production as we experienced last year and still enter the heating season with more gas than we did last year. It is this condition that has caused natural gas futures prices to fall under $6 per Mcf that has now become the latest justification for selling natural gas producer and oilfield service company stocks. This too shall pass, but in the mean time it is generating considerable heart burn.
Upcoming Natural Gas Price Crash Predicted
Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) issued a report last week in which it said that
Last week, natural gas futures prices dropped below $6 per Mcf that sent most of the oilfield service stocks crashing, especially those heavily levered to natural gas activity. Investors were extrapolating the year-low gas price as falling below the level supporting the current high level of gas drilling and production activity. As we pointed out previously, spot cash prices had fallen meaningfully below that $6 trigger point, but that move hadn’t drawn investor attention. A critical issue for the North American natural gas market is the amount of storage capacity and the types of storage facilities.
Natural gas storage can account for as much as 30% of our daily supply during winter days and plays an important role in meeting demand. Most of the gas storage facilities are in depleted reservoirs as opposed to salt caverns and aquifers. Each of these storage facilities has different capabilities, mostly having to do with their ability to efficiently accept gas injections and their ability to enable rapid withdrawals. Salt caverns appear to be the most efficient storage type as their gas can be recycled 4-12 times a year compared to only twice for depleted reservoirs.
The
As Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Chairman Joseph T. Kelliher wrote in a December regulatory ruling, “Since 1988, gas storage has expanded only 1.4%, while demand has risen 24%.” This would suggest that he recognizes the need for additional storage capacity. Last November, Chevron’s gas business (CVX-NYSE) filed an application with FERC to build four salt cavern storage facilities in two locations holding a total of 6 Bcf of working gas. These facilities, if approved, would begin construction during 2006, with the first two ready for service in 2008 with the remaining ones activated in 2010. At that pace, it is difficult to see our working gas storage capacity, currently estimated at 3.8 Tcf, growing fast enough to meet the various projected needs.
Nigerian Kidnapping Sends Chill Through The Oil Industry
Somewhere between 3 a.m. and
The usual suspect for the attack, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Nigerian Delta (MEND) did not claim responsibility. This was out of character as MEND usually claims credits for its attacks fairly quickly. Representatives of Fred Olsen Energy were reportedly in contact with the attackers trying to negotiate the workers release, but they did not disclose who the attackers were. After the kidnapped workers were released, there was no comment from government officials or Fred Olsen representatives as to who the perpetrators were or whether a ransom was paid.
The significance of this attack for the oil industry is that it pushes the zone of potential violence in
The June 2 attack suggested a high level of planning and coordination among militants aimed at achieving political rather than economic goals. The attack occurred only hours after Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, who was recently denied his bid for a third presidential term, conducted an international fleet review in
The skill in executing the attack creates concerns that even with an expanded and refurbished navy,
Energy Bits
Russian Oil Production Heading Up
According to figures from the Russian Ministry of Industry and Energy, oil and gas production in the country increased in May. The ministry reported that crude oil and condensate production rose to 9.62 million b/d in May, a gain of 3.2% from last year and a 0.3% increase from April. The sequential production increase was equal to the prior monthly gain. Oil exports rose by 3.2% from last year to 4.76 million b/d. Natural gas output in May was up 4.1% from last year at 54.711 billion cubic meters. This recent performance is better than government officials had previously suggested would happen, but a couple of months do not confirm a definite change in direction for
Northeast US Gas Shortage Predicted
In a new regulatory filing seeking approval to construct the Emera Brunswick pipeline, a shortage of LNG and pipeline capacity in the U.S. Atlantic Coast region was projected. The filing was seeking to construct a new 90-mile pipeline to carry 730 million Mcf/d of gas from the Canaport LNG terminal in
The filing projected that natural gas demand for the Atlantic seaboard region by 2010 should increase by 1.3 Bcf/d, leaving a shortage of 580 million Mcf/d of both LNG terminal and gas pipeline capacity even after the Emera Brunswick line is constructed. The filing also projected that incremental gas demand is expected to reach 4.3 Bcf/d in 2020, 5.9 Bcf/d in 2025 and 7.6 Bcf/d in 2030.
It is interesting to look at what this forecast says about the
India Raises Fuel Prices
On June 5, in response to rising global oil prices,
Kuwait to Start New Natural Gas Production
Exhibit 7. Shared Saudi and Kuwaiti Production Zone
Source: OGJ
Exhibit 8. Dorra Field Lies in Shared Waters
Source: Washington Institute
Contact PPHB:
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Main Tel: (713) 621-8100
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www.pphb.com
Parks Paton Hoepfl & Brown is an independent investment banking firm providing financial advisory services, including merger and acquisition and capital raising assistance, exclusively to clients in the energy service industry.