Survival of the Fittest
Looking at the situation today from the point of view of an investor or a bank, what’s in it for them? I’m probably the last person to ask this question as I was concerned at the best of times that the industry was not providing a reasonable accounting of the situation and no one ever made any money. However today I think it’s pretty clear that the financial condition of each and every producer is in desperate, and in most situations critical condition. Well beyond what I would approach as an investor. And as you can imagine I like risk. To critically evaluate any producer you’ll need to allocate 60 to 70% of their property, plant and equipment to depletion as an overall adjustment. That will correct for the accounting anomaly of bloated balance sheets and the unrecognized capital costs of past production that we all know and love in the industry. (Note that doing this at 60% for our sample of 23 producers wipes out Total Share Equity and leaves a deficit of $12.3 billion.) The past hasn’t been so bright after this adjustment has been made. In addition the liquidity in the industry is critical. No one has any cash or working capital. Properties are for sale but no one has the financial resources to complete the purchase of anything. Producers believed they could replenish cash by selling properties but that doesn’t appear to be the case anymore. No one from an equity or a debt point of view is going to touch a firm with a working capital deficiency and a history of monumental losses. It’s the underperforming and failing organization that is represented when those factors are the critical issue. The organization has not made any money and they have no money. Nothing in the world but an endless supply of money will make that pig fly. Why would an investor or bank put more capital into it?
I expect the price of oil to follow along the same trajectory of the natural gas prices. Oil being a far more complex, international market than the continental based natural gas markets. Oil has also been affected by shale, but at a much later date than natural gas was. Nonetheless the propensity to overproduce by producers continues with their deceptive accounting providing them with the belief that they remain profitable and prosperous. Overproduction continues unabated in both commodities since I noted this behavior in 1986. Now with shale the situation is wholly untenable. What is there to stop producers from continually overproducing? We recently learned of the collapse of the natural gas prices in the Permian. The differentials that exist there due to the pipeline constraints are having a material effect on the prices that are received by those producers. Granted the Permian is associated gas however the pipeline constraints also exist on the oil side of the business. It was a decade ago when natural gas prices collapsed. The natural gas futures price for September 2028 is $3.01. Such an exciting business. And in oil the current price is the highest price quoted up to 2027. Clearly nothing is expected to be resolved about the walking dead oil and gas business in the next decade either.
This therefore reflects the complete nature of the failure of the oil and gas industry. No one expects anything is going to happen. Producers are actively drilling more wells and buying land cheered on by a media that is as enamoured with the process of drilling as the producers are. The industry is a financial wasteland where nothing of value exists and nothing is profitable. Survival is attributable to the fact that it’s a capital intensive industry that continues to produce cash flow from those previous investments that allow the lights to stay on and rent to be paid, for now. Yet nowhere does anyone see the problem that there is no problem. There is only a problem if you consider that oil and gas would be classified as a business. And that’s where I’m wrong. It’s a study in how best to drill a well. There never has been any intent for it to be a commercial operation.
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