Intangible vs. Intangible and Tangible
In a competitive environment for investment dollars. Why would one industry be provided with the luxury of paying the investor back over several decades, as is the case in oil and gas. Or pay the money back in the current period in other industries such as technology. One being a traditionally good place to put your money in terms of upside, the other industry being a chronic abuser of the number of shares outstanding, that being oil and gas. In terms of the treatment of how capitalization occurs in oil and gas, producers have an exceptional allowance from the accounting standards boards and the SEC to record anything and everything as an asset and hold it there for the next few decades. Including the Post-it-Notes of the receptionist. And in other industries the recording of assets is not permitted, where otherwise capital costs are recognized in the current period. Costs such as software companies product development are realized immediately in the current period.
I can criticize the recording of Post-it-Notes, the receptionists time and the phone service charges to property, plant and equipment and gain a general consensus that these don’t belong there. The Preliminary Specification takes the position that producers would be better off if they were to realize their capital on a much more timely basis. Secondly the accuracy of the earnings and cash flow are further distorted when the intangibles of the producer are also recorded as property, plant and equipment. If your objective were to “build a balance sheet” these would be productive policies to adopt. The more you spend, the more successful you are in achieving your objective in terms of value, profits and cash flow. People, Ideas & Objects suggest that we take the intangibles that are incurred in the industry and capture them as intangibles on the income statement in the current period. That would involve the drilling day work rates, the casing, cementing of the casing, fracing, perforating and other costs. Anything with a serial number would be able to be recorded as property, plant and equipment. None of the intangible items I mentioned can be recaptured and sold in the marketplace, they are irretrievably lost. Why not recognize that instead of letting them exist for decades on any “well built” balance sheet.
This all assumes that these costs of oil and gas exploration and production that are captured in the current period are maintained by profitable oil and gas producers. They would need to have the commodity prices necessary to offset the costs of royalties, capital, operations and overhead of oil and gas exploration and production. This would therefore put somewhat of a constraint on the producers drilling activities. Instead of “building balance sheets” with the implied spendaholic mania, the objective would be to maintain profitability which would require a discipline inherent in the business world. Moving accounting from the measurement of value that is imputed in the “build the balance sheet” objective, and returning it to the measurement of performance of what it is intended and designed to be. Always.
We have suggested that the overstatement of assets, earnings and cash flow were the net result of the accounting methodology in use throughout industry. The overstatement of assets and earnings are straight forward, the cash flow is a little more subtle. The intangible costs being shifted to the current period has the effect of reducing earnings, which will affect the calculation of cash flow from operations. Or in other words we are shifting a large portion of the capital expenditures incurred from investing activities to operating activities on the statement of changes. Diminishing cash flow and hence the valuation of the firm based on a multiple of cash flow. Which, based on my understanding, did not reflect the value of the firm only the depth of accounting wizardry. Some may argue this to be a timing difference in the parlance of accounting terminology. Which is true, the issue however is the bloated nature of producers balances of property, plant and equipment. They are a severe distortion that only grows more severe each year. It’s therefore time this timing issue be recognized and resolved.
Speaking to the timing nature of the issue of how People, Ideas & Objects will rectify the issues of oil and gas overcapitalization. Retirement of the current balances of property, plant and equipment is over a period of time of 2.5 years. The balance of property, plant and equipment would rebuild, somewhat, based on the capital expenditures that are incurred during the time we were retiring these bloated balance sheets. This rebuilding would be at the lower velocity of only tangible capital costs.
The net effect of this 2.5 years is that the cash that is held on the balance sheet in the property, plant and equipment account will be released back into the organization. Assuming that the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production model’s price maker strategy is defining the commodity prices and therefore all production everywhere is profitable. This cash which will be sourced from the consumers and is a repayment back to the investors for the $1.7 trillion "temporary" energy discount that the investors have had to provide consumers through the decades of accounting shenanigans by the producers. Or what we could call the other side of the timing issue. During the time in which the property, plant and equipment account balances are blown down they are replenished with only tangible assets making the account a small fraction of what it is now and more in line with what is appropriate for today’s demands of industries to compete for investment and source the capital they need to approach their future. One that producers have costed at $20 to 40 trillion in expenditures in the next 25 years. Producers need a plan on how they’ll come up with that financing. Suggesting that investors will fill their traditional role in oil and gas is unreasonable, especially when they sit on vast volumes of usable cash to solve their capital needs.
What should be evident to everyone in the industry is that the ability, the capability and the capacity to make the changes to deal with overproduction in oil and gas is currently non-existent. The over profitability reported as a result of these accounting “anomalies” has created overinvestment leading to overproduction. Bureaucrats can’t, won’t and will not ever change. Any change would also require them to do some hard work. With shale we’ll continue on these violent cycles of up and down in terms of commodity price changes. The overall trend however is steeply downward. And the cycle times are progressively shorter in each iteration. Such that the consideration of a return to “normalcy” is never even dreamed of. With such stability in the industry, with such capacity for change, I don’t know, maybe the need for the radical changes in the Preliminary Specification are not required!
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.