- Take Me Out To The Ball Game
- Katrina Wrecks Havoc on the Offshore Industry
- Venezuela in the News
- Gasoline Prices Confound Consumers
- Gazprom Strives to Open US LNG Market
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
Take Me Out To The Ball Game
Whenever fans rise to their feet to belt out this popular song at a baseball game, they know it is the middle of the seventh inning. If the home team is ahead, then the fans are wondering if the team can hold the lead for two more at-bats by the visitors. If behind, the home team is encouraged by the fans to try to score more runs during its upcoming three at-bats. But all fans know the end of the game is approaching. For investors, the perennial question is: What inning are we in? Investors always want the answer so they can figure out timing their exit from their holdings in a given industry. So in what inning are oilfield service stocks?
Crude oil prices hover near $68 per barrel. Natural gas prices are well over $10 per mcf. The drilling rig count continues to climb to recent record levels, and Hurricane Katrina’s ravaging of the
While some may call me a Cassandra, the reality is that Katrina is marking a shift in consumer psychology about energy, a change that could materially impact underlying energy demand and alter the current and expected balance of supply and demand. While the attitude shift is in response to the explosion of retail gasoline prices, once underway, it will develop a life of its own. That attitude shift will last longer than many of us currently imagine. In 1979, the Iranian embassy seizure was the political lightening rod associated with an explosion in global crude oil prices. High profile events mark our view of industry trends, but often the fundamentals have already begun to shift before the event. For example, Hurricane Andrew in late August 1992 appeared to mark the revival of the energy business, but the reality was that natural gas fundamentals had started to improve months ahead of the storm’s arrival. Yes, Andrew helped propel the oilfield service industry’s recovery, but the storm’s ravaging of the offshore infrastructure merely accelerated what had already begun.
Let’s review the events of 1979 and compare them to 2005. In January 1979, under pressure from civilian protests about his regime and its repressive conditions, the ailing Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, abandoned the Peacock throne. His leaving enabled exiled religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei to return from
Exhibit 1. As Iran’s Production Fell Saudi Stepped Up
Source: BP Statistical Review, PPHB
While the Iranian oil industry struggled, the political situation in the country deteriorated as supporters of the Shah escaped and supporters of Khomenei seized control of the government and its bureaucracy and raged against the evils of the
After the hostages were seized, the
Exhibit 2. Oil Prices Exploded in Late 1970s
Source: EIA, PPHB
As a result of the explosion in gasoline prices and its reduced supply, the
What happened in the country was a sea-change in consumer psychology. Shortage mentality gripped the country as people waited in gasoline lines, such as occurred in 1973, and feared the impact of a severely cold winter. They contemplated how they would adjust their lifestyle. New car purchases emphasized more efficient vehicles. Home thermostats were pushed down in winter and up in summer to conserve energy. The impact of these lifestyle changes was the first drop in
Exhibit 3. A Five Year Period of Falling Consumption
Source: EIA, PPHB
Although the end of the energy boom in terms of stock prices came in early 1981, the energy industry continued to expand, building more rigs and putting them to work. The
From 1985 to 1992, the domestic oil and gas industry struggled with equipment overcapacity, low levels of activity, weak pricing and inadequate revenues and profits. Deteriorating company finances led to a huge number of bankruptcies, forcing a major restructuring of the oilfield service industry. As the oilfield service industry struggled to regain its balance, the overall energy industry was beginning to recover. Oil and gas demand started to climb. The restructuring of the oilfield service industry gave companies greater control over the expanded capacity, helping to restore pricing power.
Despite the improving activity trends, the overall impression of the oilfield service industry’s health was not positive. The shock of the recent industry depression overhung management attitudes and actions. But by the early 1990s, the nascent improvement in
Exhibit 4. Gas Prices Recovered Before Andrew Arrived
Source: EIA, PPHB
The recovery in natural gas prices in the spring of 1992, coupled with the impact of the damage to the offshore oil and gas drilling and producing infrastructure, set the stage for the next up-cycle for the energy industry. Today, we are 13 years into that upturn. Many forecasters, focused on the changing global energy supply/demand fundamentals, are debating when sufficient global surplus productive capacity will be established to ease the high current oil and gas prices. In Economics 101, we are taught that rising prices will cause demand to slow or decline. To date that has not happened. However, slowing demand growth, and its eventual fall, was not obvious during the late 1970s, either. It was only with hindsight that we realized demand did adjust to high oil prices.
While the current global energy supply/demand dynamics suggest that it may be a number of years before a reasonable balance between supply and demand is established, investors need to remember that stock prices discount changes in earnings outlooks for companies. The end of the 1970s energy stock price boom came in early 1981 despite fundamentals remaining strong for another few years before collapsing in the mid 1980s.
The impact of the ending of the energy stock boom can be clearly demonstrated by the expansion in the energy sector weighting within the S&P 500 index from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. However, after almost doubling in importance in the index, the energy weighting was cut about in half in a matter of two years. Since late in 2004, the S&P 500 energy weighting has climbed from 5% to about 9.5%. we doubt the weighting will grow much more.
Exhibit 5. Energy Weightings in S&P 500 Index
Source: S&P, CIBC, PPHB
If investors had understood the fundamental changes in energy demand underway in 1979 as a result of the Iranian revolution, marked by the seizure of the
Katrina Wrecks Havoc on the Offshore Industry
Updates on the damage to the oil and gas producing infrastructure will arrive daily, but the information from the companies and the Minerals Management Service will never be totally current. Based on the latest information we could collect at the end of last week, Hurricane Katrina damaged a dozen rigs and 30 platforms. Estimates are that about 100 pipelines also sustained damage. We are not going to follow the volume of shut-in offshore oil and gas production or refining capacity off-line because these numbers are extremely volatile.
Beginning with the hurricane force winds and the storm surge on Monday, the damage to the oil industry’s
Exhibit 6. Katrina’s Path Targeted Numerous Rigs
Source: RigZone.com
While all the reports for offshore producers have not been collected, at least 30 producing platforms have been damaged. Of this total,
Exhibit 7. Shell’s Mars Platform with H&P Rig 201
Source: Chouest Offshore
18 platforms have been lost and 12 have experienced significant damage. A major victim of the damage was Apache Corp. (APA- NYSE) that lost 8 platforms producing 7,158 b/d of oil and 12.1 mmcf/d of gas before the storm. The other major victim was Shell that suffered significant damage to its Mars tension leg platform that was producing 147,000 b/d of oil and 157 mmcf/d of gas before Katrina’s arrival. The Mars platform held Helmerich & Payne’s platform rig 201 that appears to be a total loss.
All the offshore supply boat and helicopter fleets appear to have been spared by the hurricane. These companies, however, have suffered significant damage to base facilities on the point of land supporting
Exhibit 8. Fourchon/Grand
Source: Cal Dive, Chouest Offshore
Exhibit 9.
Source: ERA, Chouest Offshore
significant damage to, these support bases will result in an increase in distance for boat trips to move people and supplies to the offshore work sites. That will increase costs for operators working in the eastern and central regions of the
As the petroleum industry recovers from Katrina’s aftermath, the oilfield service industry will be called upon to repair offshore producing infrastructure damage. In addition, it will need to re-drill lost wells. The destruction of several jackup drilling rigs may give some hope to investors who are concerned about the growth of the orderbook for newbuild offshore rigs. We are not sure that will ultimately prove true, but the impact of Katrina in the near-term will tighten the offshore drilling rig market as operators, both in the Gulf of Mexico and internationally, bid for fewer available rigs.
Venezuela in the News
We won’t begin to offer our opinion of the Rev. Pat Robertson’s comments on what we should do with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, but we wonder if Robertson was suffering from a “senior moment.” The more important news from
Chavez has begun a campaign to reduce his country’s economic dependence on the
PdVSA has recently opened an office in
Besides the exploration agreement, PdVSA and CNPC agreed to conduct a survey of Junin 4, a 640-square kilometer block within the Orinoco Belt. That region contains an estimated 20 billion barrels of heavy oil and bitumen.
Exhibit 10.
Source: CIA
While Chavez is developing new energy industry associations and new consuming markets for his oil, PdVSA still retains a significant asset base in the
The other recent news was the announcement of PdVSA’a strategic expansion plan calling for $56 billion in investment over the next seven years to increase
Currently, PdVSA claims the country produces more than 3.2 million b/d, which means the expansion plan would increase
Another consideration about the plan is that the $56 billion cost estimate includes other investments. For example, projected investments in natural gas production will cost $17 billion, three new refineries at a cost of $7 billion and the construction of a new $6 billion oil-working city near the Orinoco Belt. If one subtracts these investments, PdVSA is left with $26 billion for its oil production capacity expansion. That means the production capacity expansion would be achieved for $10,000 per daily barrel, or less than one-third of the cost of the 1991-1998 expansion. Even if we assume that PdVSA could expand its production capacity at the same cost as its 1990s expansion, then the total expansion program has a cost of $121 billion, or more than twice that of the announced plan.
We have to believe that Chavez encouraged this announcement of the proposed production capacity plan to encourage
Gasoline Prices Confound Consumers
Even before the impact of the devastation from Hurricane Katrina was felt in petroleum markets, gasoline prices had been climbing in tandem with the rise in crude oil prices. As consumers grew frustrated with the rise, political outcries began. In early August when the Energy Bill was being finalized for President George Bush’s signature, analyst Michelle Foss commented on the bill. “The best thing is that no one tried to control prices or put caps on gasoline or natural gas. There was a lot of fear that there would be something like that.” No sooner were those words uttered than the State of
In 2002,
The
The lowest cost price zone in the state is
The
The state of
In other moves, the Governor of Georgia has signed a law waving the state’s $0.075 per gallon tax. Other states are considering tax holidays.
Last Friday, a new public opinion poll by the Associated Press and NBC News said that 72% of the American public believes the oil industry is taking advantage of the Katrina damage to gouge the public. That is a prevalent attitude and emerges every time the price of gasoline jumps due to any disaster or geopolitical event. Despite the best efforts of the petroleum industry, its public image remains that of robber barons grabbing greedily for profits.
Exhibit 11. More Poignant Today
Source: azurelunatic.livejournal.com
The industry’s image will be tarnished further by a Senate hearing on gasoline prices scheduled for Tuesday and a House Energy Sub-Committee hearing on Wednesday. While it will be difficult to prove that the industry has engaged in any illegal activities, the complexity of the gasoline and refining market makes it difficult to explain in layman’s terms why prices move. All the past government and regulatory probes of the gasoline market have failed to uncover any illegal rigging actions. The gasoline industry is to be probed once again by a team of 30 state Attorneys General. They will be looking at the movement of gasoline prices during the thirty days prior to August 27. These government actions further cement our view that today’s unfolding events increasingly reflect a replay of the 1970s, which was not a particularly good time for the oil production industry.
Given our experience in the 1970s with price regulation and rationing of gasoline, one would think that politicians have learned that these actions will do nothing but damage the gasoline market for all their constituents. Maybe it is a congenital deficiency of politicians. Or maybe it is their need for publicity. Whatever, they need only to look at the gasoline lines in
Gazprom Strives to Open US LNG Market
Gazprom (OGZPF.PK) has sold its first load of LNG to Shell (RDS-NYSE). The gas was delivered to the
Over the past two years as the Yukos drama has played out, the maneuvering of the Kremlin to restructure the Russian oil industry has become obvious. Gazprom is a major part of that restructuring and is growing with the help of increased ownership, i.e., cash infusion, from the Russian government. The plan is to turn Gazprom, which has been primarily a domestic natural gas company, into a world-scale energy company through acquisitions. Another chapter in that transformation is the commencement of construction of a
Gazprom, the world’s largest gas producer, supplies the Russian government with one-quarter of the country’s income. In addition, because of price regulations, Gazprom supplies 71% of its gas volumes to domestic markets at essentially cost. Therefore, the company struggles to be profitable and has to earn all its profits and tax revenues from its gas exports.
In 2002, Gazprom participated in the construction of the Blue Stream pipeline under the
On August 19, Gazprom announced that it had begun construction on a new 1,200-kilometer pipeline under the
Exhibit 12. Gazprom’s New Baltic Sea Pipeline
Source: Stratfor
Gazprom has begun construction of the land segment of the pipeline extending from its gas infrastructure to the Baltic coast, or about 100 km. That project will require about six months to complete. The plan is then to build the remainder of the pipeline within two to three years. Why this leisurely time schedule? Obviously Gazprom is hoping that financial support will be forthcoming from somewhere.
More than likely, if this project is built, it will be done with the aid of the Russian government. The pipeline will be built because it fits the Russian government’s geopolitical strategy. At the present time, Gazprom’s gas exports flow through the
As Gazprom grows, it has several objectives. First, it is attempting to transform itself into a global energy company, balanced in both its gas and oil production/reserves and with the ability to become a more profitable company. Second, the company wants to become a more international company with substantial gas and oil exports, i.e., increased earnings and profits. Third, it wants to secure markets in important consumer markets that may be politically important for
Watching the evolution of Gazprom will likely become as much of an energy and investor spectator sport in 2005-2006 as the Yukos drama was in 2004. The transformation of Gazprom involves not merely the creation of a new global energy company, but it also has implications for the global energy market. The significance of Gazprom’s evolution may be greater than the demise of Yukos, but that conclusion will depend on events yet to transpire. In the next couple of years, Gazprom may prove to have more strategic importance in the energy market than the travails of
Correction
In our August 23, issue we misspelled the name of the firm that Ed McGaughey is associated with. The firm is Pearl Meyer & Partners. We regret the error.
Contact PPHB:
1900 St. James Place, Suite 125
Houston, Texas 77056
Main Tel: (713) 621-8100
Main Fax: (713) 621-8166
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.