Tuesday, May 16, 2017

We Are The Standard

Yesterday we detailed the issue that oil and gas producers face as a result of their inaction and covering up the difficulties they’re experiencing. Chronic and systemic overproduction and oversupply are now a permanent feature of shale based reservoirs. And commercial financial performance has never been attained anywhere in the industry over the past four decades. This has set the investment community on strike, creating a cash crisis that deepens with each successive quarter. Continued avoidance of the issues by the producers can only continue for so long. At some point they will need to regain the trust and confidence of the investment community, and banks, in order to function as viable going concerns operating commercial businesses. How can that trust and confidence, the integrity that they have things in hand, be earned by the industry?

People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and the service provider organizations that they’re developing will be the means in which the industry regains the trust and confidence of the investment community. Primarily by providing the oil and gas producers with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Something that we’re dedicated too and have developed as key elements of the Preliminary Specification. Everything that is done in the Preliminary Specification is to generate the profitability that a commercial industry needs. This is done so that society can prosper as a result of a healthy oil and gas industry. People will continue to be gainfully employed. People will be able to look to the industry as an area of interest to pursue through their university education. People in the service industry will be able to develop businesses that continue as going concerns and not risk everything on the “cyclical” nature of oil and gas. These people will pay taxes, as will the oil and gas producers. Who will also pay royalties. And lastly the investors who have made this all happen will be able to see the day when their investments have actually paid off. That is how an industry contributes to society. Other than the bureaucrats, whose benefited in the past four decades? No one.

People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and the service providers are the standard of expectation and the standard of performance that the industry will attain. Our Revenue Model specifies how we are able to source the resources that we need to achieve this. We are not blind sleepwalking agents of whomever will feed us. We are delivering the systems, accounting and administration that is necessary to achieve the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. By running the industry as a business we will be able to achieve much more than what’s been done to date. What will be expected of us in the next 25 years will be the most demanding period that the industry has ever faced. Where is the current discussion of this future? Muddling along through the next 25 years will only bring more of the poor performance we’ve seen throughout the past four decades. Muddling along and doing nothing are abject failures as the strategy of every producer. It was an inane strategy, ridiculous to consider and foolish to pursue. Now the evidence shows that it’s been a financial disaster.

We commence developments with our user community of our software on September 25, 2017. Producers need to realize the situation that exists today and take steps to remediate these problems. Otherwise the end is clearly in focus. Their participation is a necessary element of this development in a number of ways. They hold the financial resources that we need to build our product and services. We need the $100 million for our first years development costs in place by our start date. We then will need our full budget in place by September 2018. Producers should ask themselves if the act of funding our budget will satisfy the investors to the point where they’ll call off their strike? Another aspect of our need for producers participation is in terms of software quality. They need to work with our user community to ensure that they are receiving the software that they need to function. If you put nothing into this development I can assure you’ll get nothing out of it. There are fundamental and significant changes being made to the producer firms and industry. Being unaware and unknowing of these would be terminal to your operation. There would also be, in my opinion, no opportunity for you to catch up once the software is operational. The speed of the producers on our system will overwhelm your performance in the marketplace.

The writing's on the wall. What will you do? Try the junk bond market again? Muddling along will certainly be the operative strategy. However the difficulties will be about as high or higher as they have been these past two years. A constant chronic and regressive struggle throughout your future. Or you can choose to make the change that will end this destructive cycle that began long before most of the people began working in the industry. The culture is flawed and needs to be shelved. We need to adopt the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable culture that is the by-product of the Preliminary Specification.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.

Monday, May 15, 2017

ROFLOL

Earnings of the producers for the first quarter of 2017 have all been published for the most part. I have been critical of the earnings and accounting of the producers on this blog. On many occasions I’ve stated that they did not have any real profits for the past four decades and that they were not innovative. They’ve certainly proved me wrong with this first quarter's performance. In most cases the producers did report somewhat healthy profits in comparison to the past two dismal years. The problem for the producers is that there continues to be no cash. Although there were profits, no real cash was generated. Which seems odd doesn’t it? What they’ve done is increased the number of years in which their depleting their property plant and equipment. Extending it out to 15 years in some cases. Which dropped the amount of depletion recognized in the current quarter by, you guessed it, the differential in this quarter's profits. When a producer says their innovative don’t forget to include the innovations that occur in accounting as a key part of that. For the last year we’ve heard the producers claim that they reduced their costs to ensure that they were only producing profitable operations. I guess that’s true when you reduce the amount of depletion per barrel of oil, that is a reduction in the cost of oil and gas. Bernie Madoff is proud of this bunch.

This farcical and comical act reflects the bureaucracy doubling down on their positions. It reflects the position that they will stick their head in the sand and avoid the problems in the industry, at whatever cost. The quarter generated no cash, producers have no cash, no working capital and no access to any capital markets. They’ve been cutoff now for the better part of a year from the serious money that traditionally invested in the producer's annual stock offerings. I saw no money being raised by any of these firms in the first quarter. Banks have stopped all material lending of any money. Those that were fortunate enough to have raised any cash from banks spent that cash on dividends. Otherwise they would’ve had to cease the distribution of those dividends. Profitable yes, in an obscure accounting sense, but cashless.

My analysis of the quarter determined a new factor that I think effectively reflects the distorted nature of what I’ve been talking about here. That bloated balance sheets of property, plant and equipment exist everywhere in the industry. And as a result none of the producers recognize the capital costs of past production and as such have never been profitable. It does no one any good to have these capital costs, in a capital intensive industry, sit for 15 years. If the industry would have recognized them in an appropriate manner, as a business, these costs would have flowed to the income statement. Where, if they were receiving commercial prices for their products they would have been able to report real profits and return those capital investments in property, plant and equipment back into cash for further investment. This would be a commercial operation. But why would you do that when you can just hold an annual share offering.

This factor that I am speaking of reflects this distortion but also shows that the fake profits that they’ve reported over their lifetime don’t amount to a hill of beans. I reviewed 23 companies and compiled a summation of those companies into a representative sample of the industry. These are North American based producers that have 7.688 million barrels of oil equivalent per day output. Their undepleted property, plant and equipment currently stands at $459.2 billion while their cumulative lifetime earnings as represented in retained earnings sits at $61.9 billion. Most if not all of these producers are in excess of 20 years old. The return of dividends in 2016 was $8.5 billion or 1.85%. We’ll assume that has been the case for each of the prior years. Nonetheless, returning only 13.5% of that investment over the life of those assets, above the possibly 37% in dividends over that period. Is abysmal. And that is on the basis of an accounting that is highly questionable. On a reasonable accounting basis this producer sample would have reported $397.3 billion in losses.

This is the issue that the bureaucrats need to focus on. Chronic, systemic overproduction, oversupply and unprofitability. If they don’t see that problem I’d be surprised. They certainly went to great lengths to try to hide these facts in the first quarter 2017 reports. The issue is performance, and clearly there is none, and never has been. I have detailed the number of reasons that this issue exists. The remedy is the Preliminary Specification, its decentralized production model and price maker strategy which we are undertaking to begin developments on September 25, 2017. Please note the change in the date. I have moved it back three weeks.

I doubt that I am the first to look at these numbers from the point of view of an investor. I’m sure that’s why there is no further investment being made in the industry. And these first quarter 2017 accounting shenanigans will not have changed any minds. Clearly there is a problem and the investors were only adding to it by participating in the annual stock offerings. Why would that continue? I see no reason for that until the producers deal with the issues at hand. I think they’re fooling themselves into believing that this is fixed.

This is the history of the industry. And we all know that accounting doesn’t matter in oil and gas. But accounting is about performance. Clearly the industry in the past four decades has not performed. It is reasonable to state that it never attained a level of commercial operations. Investors had expressed their concerns that shale may not be a viable commercial operation. We are nowhere near answering that question. Is a continuation of these non-commercial operations for the next 25 years in the industry's future? What’s the plan? It's one thing to avoid the problem, it's another to publish quarterly reports that represent the wholesale dishonesty of what has been said in the past year. “We are profitable at $40.” etc. Integrity is a hard attribute to reclaim once its lost.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here

2 millionth word

I estimate that we are now in excess of two million words on this subject.

Friday, April 28, 2017

Third Friday Off

No Posting Today

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Earnings Season, Once Again

First quarter reports of the producers began being published yesterday. This will provide us with our first look at what 2017 has to bring in terms of losses for the producers. If there are any earnings I’ll be more than surprised. I have been writing in preparation for this time since late September 2016. Beginning with our series on the “Best Business Opportunity, Ever” which details the opportunity to invest in oil and gas has never been better, that is when the Preliminary Specification is operational. Our next series detailed why it is we should have the Preliminary Specification in the marketplace. This series was entitled “My Argument.” And finally in addition to proposing a product in the form of the Preliminary Specification we submitted our plan of how it will be developed beginning September 4, 2017 in our series entitled “Our Plan.” Not giant steps but certainly more than what our friends the bureaucrats accomplished.

I believe these first quarter reports will stand in direct contrast to the optimism that has been spewed over the past six months by the producers. The Saudi’s and OPEC’s agreement put the North American producer in the position where they had no one left to blame for their poor financial performance. Therefore they have been out leading the parade of promoters that all is well and banging the big bass drums as loud as possible. The increase in oil prices to $55 was all that was required for them to return to their heydays. Rigs have been put back to work at a record rate and the increase in U.S. production is breaking records too. This behavior is in the cultural DNA of the bureaucrats. They can’t, won’t and will not ever change. With no one to blame for their continued poor performance, who will believe them that “next time” they’ll get it right. That all they need is a bit more “time.” With the aggravating factor of the prolific nature of shale, you can be sure I won’t be buying it.

In the next two weeks we’ll know the truth. Is $55 oil all that is required to make producers profitable. Not even close. There is however one key component that is now irrefutable and should be common knowledge for every person that works in oil and gas. I could even see the bureaucrats agreeing to this point. The OPEC agreement has shown the industry that the oil and gas commodities are price makers. Anyone who doubts that is being foolish. Just as the Preliminary Specification enables the producers to manage these commodities. What is needed now is the implementation of the Preliminary Specification and our recommended tripling of the oil and gas prices to put the industry back on a (real) profitable footing.

Our point of view, our solution and our plan can now be critiqued against the performance of the producers. 2015 and 2016 were the two worst years in oil and gas. Nothing has changed other than a production sharing agreement between OPEC members. There is a choice that needs to be made. Which direction will the oil and gas industry proceed. One in which it continues to “muddle along” and “do nothing” or proceed with the development of the Preliminary Specification on September 4, 2017.

Our budget captures the scope and scale of the issue at hand. It’s publication in early 2014 shows that we understand that issue and what is required to deal with it. To begin our developments we are seeking $100 million for our first years developments costs. That will enable us to start developing our software effective September 4, 2017 and continue with our fund raising until September 2018 when the remainder of our budget is secured. Then proceed until we finish our product. As I’ve pointed out elsewhere I’m no longer in the business of herding cats. If the industry wants this solution they can raise the money amongst the producer firms quite quickly. For the industry to rely on me to herd cats and try to cobble together the money will only cost them many years of unnecessary and very costly time which they have none of.

I’ll be taking two weeks off from writing returning May 15, 2017. I think the world has heard enough from me on this topic. Please review the three series of blog posts that have been written in the past year. They will provide an understanding of where I think we need to go. Also look in detail at the producer's financial reports being published in the next two weeks, and ask yourself, what is it that these people are offering?

P.S. Cenovus reported their earnings on Wednesday. They have the misfortune of trying to finance the $13 billion acquisition of Conoco’s heavy oil assets. This would effectively double the size of the company. Cenovus has no capability to finance a deal of this magnitude at this time. I would suggest it's questionable whether they could finance it in the most lenient of financial times in the industry. Therefore desperate people do desperate things. The quarterly report, note I said quarterly, not pro forma, has recorded a transaction where $2.5 billion of assets that were listed for sale on March 31, 2017 have been moved from Property, Plant and Equipment to Current Assets. These assets were noted in an April 25, 2017 Motley Fool report that quoted the company as saying "Cenovus indicated that it had received “several” inquiries from CEOs of other energy companies interested in purchasing some of the non-core assets Cenovus now owns." It will be interesting, in my opinion, to see who, the CEO or CFO, goes to prison for this. My thinking is that they'll be cell buddies. This is a material misstatement of the facts. It is not an error or a mistake. It is willful and designed to deceive those that would provide the $13 billion in financing. And is therefore accounting fraud. This is what has become of our industry.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Risks

When we consider the damage that has been inflicted on society from the downturn in oil and gas. Where governments are sending out tax refunds to producers instead of collecting corporate taxes. Royalty holders incomes are stripped to the bone. The service industry, which is the backbone of oil and gas, continues to somehow survive. Investors and bankers look at the giant money pits they’ve been duped into. And the people who work in oil and gas realize maybe working in this industry was a critical mistake. The resolution of these issues, even the identification of them, is something that our friends the bureaucrats don’t have the time or energy to consider. Therefore the risk that we run by not having the Preliminary Specification implemented in a timely manner is that this situation will continue. And I would suggest that the period of time that this current state would remain would be about the same amount of time that shale based reserves will be with us. We’re humans, we have the capacity to see the risk of inaction and take the appropriate steps to mitigate the losses. That is except for in oil and gas. Where “muddle along” and “do nothing” are the strategy and operating procedure that the industry has been built upon and religiously adheres too.

Natural gas has been depressed since 2010. It was 2014 when oil prices took their downward turn. What steps have been taken to mitigate the risk of any further losses being incurred in the industry? I am unaware of any. There has been significant blame tossed around that the Saudi’s this and OPEC that and prayers for cold winters. But outside of this there’s been nothing. There is no leadership in the industry whatsoever. It is sit on your hands until things turn around. Shale has fundamentally changed the industry from scarcity to abundance. Demanding that we recognize the need for a new business model in which to operate the business. If we don’t recognize this change and solve it by implementing the Preliminary Specification with its decentralized production model and price maker strategy. Then we run the risk that we will lose the capabilities that we’ve developed within the industry, regress and begin to lose our capacities.

There are no guarantees that the Preliminary Specification is viable. At this point it is little more than a functional business model that deals with today’s issues. It needs to be built. And that requires the participation of the industry to make it work. Will that happen? Does it need to happen? The risk is that the industry never realizes productive operations again. Producers are proving that they are incapable of identifying or dealing with this issue. In the 1980’s and 1990’s it was “oh whoa is me, we had another bad year financially with record oil and gas production.” Sound familiar? The industry is not financially viable anymore. The oil and gas prices that it receives have destroyed the financial strength of all of the producers. It now doesn’t receive the prices nor have the financial strength to carry it through any more difficulties. Therefore there is no more resilience in the industry. What we do know with all of this devastation is that nothing is said or done about it. This level of risk is unnecessary and very dangerous. I feel we will have real trouble in the very near future.

I should be the one that is the happiest of all about this state of affairs. I’ve always known that the Preliminary Specification could not be implemented within the industry during “normal” times. It needs to be done during times of duress when the status quo has failed completely. That seems to be where we’re headed. Yet I and many others affiliated with this project are the only ones that are concerned. We know it's politically incorrect to care, yet feel somebody should.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Profitable Operations

One of the issues that People, Ideas & Objects haven’t been very clear on is the producers and their properties determination of profitability. We all understand what profitable means but in oil and gas there are a number of points that the Preliminary Specification resolves regarding industries current methodology. The first of course is the depletion of capital costs in the current period. The second major issue is that the method of accounting for overhead in the industry does not lend itself to determining what the actual overhead costs are of any property. Therefore the determination of profitability of the property is almost always overstated as the depletion is stretched out to decades and the overhead estimates are a small fraction of what the actual overhead is. This is why producers continue to produce everything that they have, because everything that they have qualifies as a profitable property.

Dealing with the first issue, it is in the best interest of the producer to deplete their capital balances as quickly as possible. This would therefore represent that the property has returned the investment back to the company in the form of cash for further reinvestment elsewhere. By allowing the depletion to run into the decades permits an overstatement of earning and an overstatement of the book value of the property. Note the book value of the property being fundamentally different than the market value. By depleting their properties as quickly as possible producers will have their capital assets converted back into the cash that was invested in the property returned to them quickly and effectively. This is what the producers should be aspiring too. Not storing their capital costs on the balance sheet and leaving them there for decades on end. Storing them on their “well defended balance sheets” is counter to good business practices. Balance sheets of overstuffed capital assets would then be replaced with balance sheets of highly liquid assets.

The issue of overhead is unique. A moderate sized oil and gas company may have thousands of properties. To have each of their staff allocate their time and overhead costs to each specific property would substantially increase the producers overhead. Therefore all of the costs of overhead are charged to the corporate accounts and subsequently allocated between current corporate operations and capital. The majority of these actual overhead costs are allocated to capital during the preparation of quarterly and annual reports. In place of the actual overhead costs being charged to the property, the Petroleum Accountant Societies enable the producer to charge overhead allowances on a number of different basis. These overhead allowances are a small percentage of the actual costs to operate a property.

It is a result of the extended length of time that the capital is depleted and the very small percentage of overhead that is captured by the overhead allowances that the producing property is able to report a profitable operation. In reality however that may not be the case. If we consider that the buildings in the downtown cores of Calgary, Houston, Dallas and Oklahoma, as well as many other locations, are filled with the accountants and administrators used in oil and gas. The office space that they occupy and the costs that they incur we can rightly assume that the overhead costs in oil and gas are significant. Estimates vary for a number of reasons but it may be as high as $11 / barrel of oil equivalent. Since most of these costs are allocated to capital and the amount that is allocated to capital is unknown we can only estimate the true size of these costs.

The producers are using the high throughput production model in order to deal with the high overhead costs of their operations. The producer produces everything they have in order to allocate the costs of their overhead across the largest volume of production. This will enable them to be the most profitable as a corporate entity even though many of the individual properties are not profitable. The unprofitable properties are contributing to the overall corporate profitability of the producer by reducing an equal share of the somewhat fixed overhead costs.

This is all changed with the Preliminary Specification. First we will deplete the capital of the property as quickly as the properties net profits allow. Enabling the firm to realize the return of the capital from the property. In terms of overhead we use the decentralized production model as opposed to the high throughput production model. It seeks to match costs with revenues at whatever level of production the producer produces. The decentralized production model turns everyone of the producers costs into variable costs. So when the price of oil or gas drops below the properties profitability threshold the property can be shut-in and the royalties, operating costs and overhead costs will all be reduced to zero in line with the revenues. Incurring what we call a null operation, no profit, but also no loss. This allows the producer to scale their operation up and down their production profile based on the commodities prices. If prices are high they can produce at full capacity due to the fact that everything would be profitable. If prices drop, and 15% of their production is unprofitable, they can shut-in their unprofitable properties and continue to earn their maximum amount of profit from only 85% of their profitable properties.

The decentralized production model works by reducing the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer down to the C class executives, the earth science and engineering resources, some land and legal, and some support staff. The remaining accounting and administrative resources have been reallocated to industry wide service providers that focus on one process and have the entire industry as their client base for that process. Each month they will receive information from producing properties that they will process and generate a bill that the producer will pay as overhead for the property and their company. If the property is shut-in there will be no information generated from the property, no work will be done by any of the service providers, no billings will therefore be generated and the property will incur a null operation and the producers overall overhead will be reduced.

It is in this way that each property can be evaluated based on a detailed accounting of the actual costs of the property. If it is unprofitable then it is shut-in. Removing the marginal production from the commodity markets. Fulfilling our price maker strategy. Saving the reserves for a time when they can be produced profitably. Keeping the costs of the reserves down by not having to add the costs of the additional incremental losses to the reserves. And recording a null operation, no profit but also no loss, which maximizes the producer's profits anywhere along the producer's production profile. The service providers will be assessing the producers for the actual costs of the overhead process that they manage. Therefore oil will be much less expensive to operate in comparison to gas. And other nuances that are present in the industry will be reflected in the costs of overhead of the properties. Not every property incurs the same amount of overhead as the current overhead allowances estimate. No two would be the same, it is safe to say.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here

Monday, April 24, 2017

It's a Software Bug

The dire situation in oil and gas, I believe, is attributable to what will come to be known as a 21st century software bug. Organizations are defined and supported but most importantly constrained by the software that they use. The ERP software that is used in oil and gas is quite obviously unable to deal with the overproduction and oversupply issues. The bureaucrats also know that if they change their ERP software they will lose their lofty positions and personal cash cows. Disintermediation is occurring in all industries. Therefore the continuation of this issue will exist until such time as the Preliminary Specification with its price maker strategy is enabled within the oil and gas industry. Until then we will have only the bureaucrats basking in what little cash is produced by the industry. Everyone else will have to continue with their own personal tragedies.

Bureaucrats love to think about the big picture issues of electric cars and their impact, greenhouse gases, the impact of stored electricity ya da ya da... However to get them to concentrate on the business at hand, the business of the oil and gas business, forget it. It doesn’t excite them, it’s too much like work, besides there’s always more investors that need to be fleeced. The bureaucrats personal situation has never been better. All of their personal assets are performing well and their income has remained unscathed by the downturn in the industry. For them it has been and will continue to be the best of times. Crisis, what crisis?

Therefore the capacity and willingness to change is nonexistent in the marketplace today. That is the reality and it stands in direct contrast to our September 4, 2017 start date. I don’t have to be crazy to do this job, but I do find it to be a strategic competitive advantage. For those of us who are not experiencing the pleasant days that our friends the bureaucrats are enjoying. We know that the industry is not currently and never has enjoyed good cash flow, earnings or financial flexibility over the past four decades. The culture of the industry is to account for its tragic and substandard performance as a winning culture. That engineering in a non-commercial and unprofitable environment is the objective. This is certainly the case that I see in the industry today. And if we don’t change that, I feel that the investors and bankers, if they haven’t already, will turn their back on this industry until we can prove to them otherwise. And as a result of that lack of investment capital we will atrophy and lose much of our capacity and capabilities in the process.

The solution that People, Ideas & Objects and our user community have with the Preliminary Specification is we begin to hold the industry accountable and provide the environment for the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer to develop. This will not occur on the basis of the ERP software that exists in the marketplace today. If they had the capacity and capabilities to make these changes it may be reasonable that they would have done so by now. The industry is in desperate need of it. The only thing that our competitors have provided the producer organizations is an unchanging environment, the status quo, approximately equivalent to cementing and sealing their organizations with their software. If a producer did want to make the change, the software would continue to force the producer to regress back to the way the software was designed. What I’m calling a 21st century software bug.

In addition to the Preliminary Specification, our user community and the price maker strategy. The producers are going to need to have a defined software development capability that can ensure that the industry doesn’t get trapped in a similar situation with the Preliminary Specification. The need for our software to be able to make the appropriate and necessary changes as the industry develops. This is how People, Ideas & Objects and our user community have configured our offering. We are change based software developers. Our Revenue Model and user community vision show how the industry and producer are able to continue to develop our software and not be constrained by the current definition of the Preliminary Specification in the future.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.

Friday, April 21, 2017

Our Plan, Part XXII

Discussion with the producers always leaves one with the confidence that everything will be handled and is under control. Producers have reduced their operating costs as a result of the recent downturn. And that provides them with the knowledge that cash will flow and profitability will soar. It also represents a fundamental lack of business understanding and is the modern equivalent of running your business out of your left front pocket. Cash comes in during the day, cash goes out during the day, I have more cash at the end of the day, therefore I have cash flow and profitability. In a world where chronic, systemic overproduction and oversupply in oil and gas is the issue, the great minds of the producers focus on cost control over their operating costs! This is changing deck chairs on the Titanic.

What may not be too obvious at this point is that the overproduction and oversupply issue is what the Preliminary Specification was designed to correct. The collective overproduction by the producers just doesn’t stop. They say they have discipline, this time, but here we are four months into a production sharing agreement and the prices are about to fall as a result of higher shale volumes. It’s the same issue that was present in the 1980’s and 1990’s. The one that motivated me to start developing this solution. And it is the same issue that has fundamentally destroyed the natural gas commodity marketplace and is about to do so to the oil commodity market.

In order to solve this problem it is necessary for everyone in the industry to change “what” they do, and “how” they do it. Reading your particular section of the Preliminary Specification isn’t going to provide you with the understanding necessary to function in this new environment. You need to read the entire Preliminary Specification in order to fully comprehend all of the changes that are happening in the industry. That way the work that you do, and will do in the future, can fit into what is happening in the remainder of the industry.

The results of my industry analysis at the beginning of this year showed that each and every producer needs to triple their revenues in order to mitigate the damage that had been done to their firm and deal with the future. Running around cutting more staff to reduce your overhead. Beating up service industry representatives because you can isn’t going to solve this issue. The depth of understanding and thinking here is that when A occurs, do B. When profitability and cash flow are down, cut costs. Completely blind, deaf and dumb to the issues and opportunities that are ever present in the industry. And I have said all along that the reason for this is that we have an entrenched, complacent, lazy and happy bureaucracy who are challenged and disintermediated by People, Ideas & Objects and the user communities Preliminary Specification. Might as well through corrupt scammers in there as well. Acting stupid is just how they justify their actions and seemingly get away with it.

We can begin the process of replacing this convoluted BS by making your application to the user community. That way we can begin the process of rebuilding the industry brick by brick and stick by stick. Based on the Preliminary Specification and making the industry and producers dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable. From stem to stern. Producing oil and gas in the 21st century should be done on the basis that all of it should be done profitably. And profitable based on a real accounting that recognizes the capital costs of this capital intensive industry. Where producers will have balance sheets that have cash and financial resources that replace the bloated balances of property, plant and equipment that now only represent the capital costs of past production.

Our plan consists of a prosperous oil and gas industry. One that approaches the next 25 years as the best 25 years of the industry's history. A time where the industry achieves profitability in each one of those years. Funding their own capital expenditures, replaces and refurbishes the infrastructure that we see decaying with greater frequency on the daily news, a future in which the investors and bankers, past and present, are treated with respect and their money treated with the appropriate accountability and not used just to fund the discount to the energy consumer. An energy future where responsible people are making the appropriate decisions at the appropriate times and dealing with the opportunities and issues as they arise. An industry that doesn’t blame the Saudi’s or OPEC, a warm winter or just the way things are on their poor performance and lackadaisical “muddle along” strategy and “do nothing” operating procedure. An industry that has respect for those who have committed their careers to the professions in the industry and expect to have more seniority than what casual labor has in the construction industry. An industry that has respect for the work that is done in the service industry and works hand in hand with those innovative and dynamic people who make the industry operate. And yes will actually pay the people who work in the industry and service industry on a timely basis. A place where it is not an honour and privilege to still have a job but a place where you can make a difference. And they say I’m the crazy one, that’s just because I expect more and dare to ask, what’s their plan?

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here

Thursday, April 20, 2017

Our Plan, Part XXI

People, Ideas & Objects have established September 4, 2017 as our development start date for a variety of reasons. The first is we need to act, we are and will be no better than the bureaucrats that we’ve criticized for their inaction over the past decade. We need time to develop our software and I can assure you that the first question that producers will ask when they realize they need the Preliminary Specification is “what have you got.” We’ll need to be well on our way with this plan when that time comes. The impatience of the producers will become one of our issues in developing the software that the industry needs. The second reason for our start date is the looming crisis in oil and gas. There is a lot riding on the belief that oil prices will remain in the $50 range from this point forward, that those prices provide for producer profitability, that OPEC will continue to reduce production to accommodate U.S. based shale producers and natural gas has bottomed out. That the industry has weathered the worst storm ever and is on the comeback trail. The stock prices of the producers are far too high to fairly represent the value that these companies are providing. The bureaucrats have sold a story that everyone, once again, is believing. They need to now deliver that promised profitability in their first quarter reports of 2017 or the faith that they’ve got it under control may be eroded. We’ve been here before with the only difference being that the stakes just get higher with each round.

The only thing stranger than the high values of the producers stock is the promotion these stocks are receiving from the brokerage community. If you watch the movie “The Big Short” you can see that the banks offloaded their junk on an unwitting public just before the crash occurred. Even though it was known that the mortgage market was ripe for collapse people were hoodwinked into buying the bank's positions in these products. I think the same thing is happening here. The promotion of the producers is completely out of left field. It makes no sense to me. Commentary does not fit the producer firm that is being covered. The ability and capability of the producer to survive the next two years is in serious question, in my opinion, and the brokerages are stating that it's the next Apple.

To contrast the ridiculous nature of the commentary we will take the most extreme example available. That is Chesapeake Energy. The commentary is coming from this Financial Times column. Below I’ve separated some of the comments between those that I believe are truthful and those that are not consistent with the truth.

Some truth
Chesapeake still faces an uncertain future.
When Mr Lawler arrived, he faced a two-fold task: improving performance to make Chesapeake’s operations more profitable, and cleaning up the Augean stable of the balance sheet.
A renewed slump in prices, though, would threaten his plan to cover spending from cash flows by the end of next year, and Moody’s has warned that Chesapeake’s ratings could be downgraded again if it appears unlikely to deliver production growth in 2018.

Some mistruths
Notably, the company’s profitability is higher now with US crude prices at about $50 per barrel than it was at $100 per barrel in 2014.
Mr Lawler suggests that real success at Chesapeake would mean not just keeping the company afloat, but being able to show that “not only did we fix our problems, during the worst commodity price cycle in decades, we also positioned the company to show extremely competitive growth versus some of our peers”.

“The company’s profitability is higher now with US crude prices at about $50 per barrel than it was at $100 per barrel in 2014.” I don’t understand any of this comment. In 2014 Chesapeake reported $1.917 billion in earnings. During 2015 and 2016 Chesapeake reported losses of $19.086 billion. $4.399 billion of that loss in 2016. Chesapeake is 75% natural gas. Oil prices are not material to their profitability. These two statements provide the reader with the false hope that, with current, somewhat higher oil prices, Chesapeake has weathered the worst of the storm. It’s production profile has also declined precipitously over the past two years, from 770,000 boe/day to 575,000 boe/day.

Oil and gas is predominantly held by institutions. They certainly wouldn’t be buying this. If, as I suspect, these institutions are rotating out before the big collapse, so that John Q. Public can be left holding the losses in their recently purchased oil stocks, then the industry will be in for the reckoning that I’ve been writing about. The big, or smart money moving out of the industry is a sign of a loss of faith that there is any plan for the future. Producers can’t, won’t and will not ever change, and there is no plan. Other than drill more wells and lose a lot more money. This is why we need to be prepared and moving forward on September 4, 2017.

The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here