These Are Not the Earnings We're Looking For, Part XIV
Profitability was also hit. Not as a result of producers taking our advice and depleting large volumes of their property, plant and equipment. Recognizing the capital costs of past production will have to wait as the depletion that was recorded in the first quarter of 2018 was lower than the first quarter of 2017 @ $14.562 vs. $12.246 billion in 2018. Even at that the first quarter of 2017’s profits were $3.9 billion vs 2018’s $3.6 billion. Moving the number of years that property, plant and equipment will need to be depleted from 8.94 years to 9.58 years. Is it that operations are just consuming the cash and profits? Are overheads that much of an issue in oil and gas? These facts provide me with two distinct understandings. Investors and bankers, who have been on strike for the past couple of years, who now see the further rapid deterioration in producers operations, working capital and cash balances, will not be running to save them on the basis that they’re managed today. They will need to see some change to the future outcomes of the industry before they’ll commit new cash to the oil and gas industry incinerator. The second point is this cash crisis will bring about the end of the “muddle along” strategy and “do nothing” operating procedure. Sitting around doing nothing while the house is on fire is a bad strategy for all concerned. Time to act.
It has always been People, Ideas & Objects contention that the industry has distorted its accounting for the past four decades. Recording the capital costs of a capital intensive business as assets in property, plant and equipment. Then depleting these costs over the life of the reserves that were discovered. Whether those reserves would last 20 years or 100 it didn’t matter. Capital was rarely recognized as a cost in the oil and gas business for these past forty years. The working capital deficiencies of this type of operation would of course be significant. Investors and bankers were expected to provide the lifeline for the producer to a) call themselves successful and b) keep the lights on. What in fact was going on was, and what has deteriorated to a significant level over these past forty years is a dependency on investors unlike anywhere else at anytime. As a result the effect of this mismanagement is that the consumers of energy have effectively been subsidized by the investors supporting the producers capital needs in these past four decades. The consumers have paid the operating costs and a small sample of the capital, the balance of the consumers capital cost subsidy is proudly displayed on the producers balance sheet as property, plant and equipment. And the size of the assets on the balance sheet is what gives the CEO his/her their proof of legitimacy, not evidence of their level of spendthrift.
To express the level that this culture is systemic and chronic within the industry there was an article from WorldOil with the following quote regarding Exxon.
CEO Darren Woods is seeking to rebuild oil and gas reserves in an investment drive targeting $30 billion in annual outlays well into the next decade. Woods’ vision runs counter to what investors are demanding from rivals, which have been restraining spending and returning cash to shareholders in the form of stock buybacks.
Exxon production was down substantially in the first quarter of 2018. Below 4 mmboe / day for the first time since the merger with Mobil. Leading the CEO to continue with Exxon’s high capital expenditure throughput. Which as noted as contrary to the investment communities desire. However, without that investment the reversal of the production profile is current, rapid and unforgiving. What the culture of the industry reflects is that it’s an either or situation. You can either have the appropriate level of capital expenditures and maintain your production profile. Or your production profile will shrink and the investors will be paid what they’re entitled to. If oil and gas was a business then the cash flow that was generated from pricing the product as a result of only producing profitable production, as the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production models, price maker strategy does. This cash flow would fuel growth in capital expenditures, the ability to pay down debt and make the appropriate returns to shareholders all at the same time, all the time. Where every year would be a “good year” in oil and gas and not just the 5 out of the last 32.
Therefore the demand for higher prices to support the costs of these capital programs is necessary. Austerity is not the answer to the issues that the industry is facing. And I don’t believe that this is the demand that is being expressed by the investment community. It is however, the choice of the bureaucrats through their “muddle along” strategy and “do nothing” operating procedure. Generally when you run a business, the business itself generates the funds to provide for the industry needs in the short, mid and long terms. What a concept, eh? And what Exxon’s CEO shows is the continuation of the attitude of having the shareholders subsidize the consumers for their capital costs of a capital intensive industry. Instead of charging the adequate price for their product, the producers would prefer to short sheet the bed for the shareholders and keep spending the money.
And now we’ve come to the third year of a self inflicted cash crisis. What to do? We will not make it out of 2018 without the actions necessary to rectify this situation. Working capital of $14.1 billion divided by the current burn rate of $4.8 billion / quarter gives you 2.94 quarters left. What bureaucrats will do without any working capital will be an interesting development. The easy way for producers to alleviate the pain would be for them to fund the Preliminary Specification. That way the investors and bankers see that there is a plan to deal with the issues and opportunities that are present in the industry, and a means to deal with the future issues and opportunities. Investors and bankers are forward looking people. They like to see what their money can do for them in the long term and with the Preliminary Specification operational in oil and gas, the future would be that of a well run business.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in our future Initial Coin Offering (ICO) that will fund these user defined software developments. It is through the process of issuing our ICO that we are leading the way in which creative destruction can be implemented within the oil and gas industry. 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.