Corrupt Accounting Practices Part III
For 2015 we have the Lease Operating Expenses and Production and Property Taxes that total $2.492 billion. These cost do not present any issues as they are all expensed in the current period and therefore reporting would not change under the Preliminary Specification. The calculation would therefore be to allocate these across the throughput of the company for the fiscal year. Devon produced 571,000 barrel / day and therefore these costs are $11.96 / barrel of oil equivalent.
Royalties are a bit of a difficult calculation to undertake. Most, if not all producers report their production as their share only. Royalties are the compensation paid in order to earn the title to the products produced. They are therefore in theory never the producers products and to report them as their products is to overstate their revenues. Therefore, in order to determine what the cost per barrel is we’ll have to calculate the royalties that were paid. There are two ways of doing this. I am going to take it from our cost point of view because we are in essence determining what the producer needs in terms of price in order to cover their costs. Therefore the costs to produce today consist of the overhead of $11.10, the capital $49.71, and the operating costs of $11.96. These total $72.77.
To impute a fair and reasonable royalty I’ll use what I think is an average industry value that is reasonable for both oil and gas. That is 18% royalties on all of the production. Therefore the prices needed to generate a 10% profit would be $101.05. If Devon were using the Preliminary Specifications price maker strategy they would immediately shut-in all of their production. As would every other North American producer. Which would lead to the solution to the problem. Then as the prices rose to around $80.00 they could start to bring their lower cost production back on stream. This is an extreme example that I am suggesting here. I only suggest such an extreme example to counter the extreme example that the producers chose to do when they mindlessly produce oil at $30.00 / barrel.
If your tactics are to produce to cover your cash costs then you will continue to produce no matter how much it costs you, and you will continue to do so for as long as you remain in control. There are other motivations that are in place that are leading the bureaucrats to continue to produce at these prices. And I think we have covered that topic. “Recycle costs” is the name of the game and it is played by determining what the price of oil is. Asking what cost would be necessary to be profitable at that price, and then stating that that is your cost of production. The significance behind the recycle costs is that the use of accountants, historical accounting figures and logic are not the necessary ingredients. You can make up the number that you need no matter what the price of oil or natural gas is. When someone asks you how you reduced your costs in such a dramatic way, in a capital intensive industry, that is based on historical accounting, tell them that you have been innovative in the field! There is a reason that this series has been entitled corrupt accounting practices. People generally go to jail for these kinds of comments and slights of hand. Just one mans opinion.
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