These Are Not the Earnings We're Looking For, Part XX
In 2018 the first half revenues were $122.2 billion for our sample of 23 producers. In 2017 the same number was $104.6 billion. An increase of revenues of 17% year over year. If we used even a reasonable basis of allocating the amount of depletion based on revenues, the amount of depletion reported in the first half of 2017 of $35.9 billion would be $42 billion in 2018 based on that percentage. However it was reported that depletion was only $25.3 billion for the first half of 2018. A direct and material difference in the profitability of the producers in that the amount of profit reported of $9.2 billion would be reduced to a loss of $7.5 billion for the first half of 2018. The more revenues you earn the less depletion you recognize. That’s an interesting theory you have there. And it certainly works for the bureaucrats! Interestingly as well, the amount of capital expenditures for the first half of 2018 totalled $31.8 billion versus $23.8 billion for the same period in 2017. Therefore the more you spend also dictates that you’ll recognize less. People, Ideas & Objects recommends a rapid elimination of the bloated nature of property, plant and equipment. We would have preferred to have seen the balance of property, plant and equipment of $489.6 billion being recognized in a two and one half year time frame. That would dictate that the first half of 2018’s depletion would have totalled $96.6 billion. Fully 78.7% of revenues. Leaving a loss for the first half of 2018 of $87.4 billion. Please note at the end of the two years the balance of property, plant and equipment would be fully depleted, however capital expenditures at the current rate for two and one half years would leave that account with $151.9 billion. A far more reasonable number. It would also be expected that, if the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production model were implemented the cash generated, as the consumers would no longer be subsidized the capital costs of their energy consumption, would increment by the $489.6 billion.
What the bureaucrats don’t seem to appreciate or understand is that oil and gas is a capital intensive business. Implying that the capital costs are the largest part of the business. Property, plant and equipment expenditures are “retired” to the balance sheets through this three legged race to “building our balance sheet” bluster for the term of at least a decade. The mathematical average for our 23 producers increased from 8.18 years at the end of 2017 to sit at 9.35 for the period ending June 30, 2018. Remarkably a 1.17 years increase in the course of six months. That also implies that the cash that was used to spend on these capital costs is lost and not retrievable until such time as these costs are recovered through the process of recognizing the depletion of the $489.8 billion in property, plant and equipment by moving it on to the income statement. This therefore represents how much money the spendaholics have taken from investors and bankers, spent and buried into the ground to be recovered “down the road.” It also represents the total amount of the subsidy that the consumers have realized by the bureaucrats graciously storing the consumers capital costs on the balance sheet for no apparent reason other than to look good in some distorted view of reality. Now I’m not talking about taxes, and I’m not talking about anything other than the performance of the organization. How quickly does it turn over its capital and how does that capital perform. The important aspect of these questions is that the cash goes out and waits almost a decade for it to be returned to the bank account. In most businesses that would be a luxury that would be considered unspeakable. Generally businesses run on cash. However in oil and gas there had always been a willing investor or banker lining up to be fleeced. Cash issues were solved when the bank balance hit a threshold that triggered the stock offering. Except the investors don’t line up anymore do they?
The cash aspect of this “luxury” is hyper critical today. When all the costs of the organization are included in property, plant and equipment. And let’s be realistic, the only issue regarding capitalization is one of accounting creativity. Therefore all of the costs that the producer incurs will sit on that big bloated beautiful balance sheet for the next decade while investors are expected to keep the piggy bank full. And so on. Today the investors can say they’ve survived their strike on the oil and gas producers for a total of three years. They’ve also never felt so liquid or prosperous! They may see, as I do, a critical cash situation that will materialize some time in 2018 for each of the producers in the industry. A hypercritical cash situation that doesn’t appear anyone in the industry is aware of or concerned about. It really is a surreal situation to anyone outside of the industry looking in.
There is an understanding in the media and within the political arenas that there has been a phenomenal job done within the oil and gas industry. The deliverability of the industry has been quite remarkable with production records being established consistently. Or was it shale reservoirs that did that? We have always had this indirect, convoluted cash drainage issue in oil and gas. I started this project back in the early 1990’s. Shale only makes the situation far worse. The prolific nature of shale boosts the political fortunes of those in power and continues the delivery of low cost oil and gas to the consumers. However the industry has never learned that it was overproducing and was never a commercial operation at any time in its past four decades. It has survived on capital infusions of ever greater volumes to backfill the cash shortages created as a result of consumers not paying for the capital costs of the product. How could they pay for those costs when the bureaucrats keep hoarding them on their balance sheets! I guess it satisfies their ego. Now with the very expensive, prolific and steep decline curves of shale the bureaucrats continue to apply the old, unsuccessful business model to this new shale era and presto, in late 2018 the thing finally blows up. Maybe the most important point of this $489.8 billion in capital assets is this number is only what is attributable to the sample of 23 producers that we follow. They represent 9.553 million barrels of oil equivalent production in North America, or 28.73% of the North American production base. With a little rounding here and there, that comes to $1.7 trillion in cash sitting, whittling away in oil and gas that someone funded so bureaucrats could walk down the street with a big old swagger about how big their balance sheet is. That $1.7 trillion is also why this is a cash crisis.
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.