I’ve changed the name of the series in which we evaluate the earnings of the oil and gas producers from “These Are Not the Earnings We’re Looking For” to this new name. Cash is one element of life that an organization is unable to live without. Time is another that is just as critical. They’re just like the water and air that sustain us. Now that cash is no longer an issue in oil and gas. That is, there is none and there also appears to be no capacity to generate any, the future of these organizations comes into question. The timing of their demise begins to tick away as they think of ways they could have, should have or would have done this or that. Unfortunately, based on the behaviors that I’ve seen over the past number of years analyzing the producers, quietly passing through the night while these reports are issued is the modus operandi in the industry once again. They are however issuing stellar Greenhouse Gas emission target reductions that impress those that are impressed with those things. Leadership has been nonexistent in the past forty years as we’ve documented in our
White Paper. Why would you need leaders when all you had to do is spend money, raise money, repeat. It’s as simple as washing your hair each morning. Oil and gas degraded into a culture of severely addicted spendaholics with no business sense some time in the 1980’s and the generations since have only learned the wise ways of their forefathers. Without any leadership to steer the ship, the ability to use the time they had to head in the appropriate direction to avoid the mess their in was not done. No one was able to identify the issues or use the time they had to their advantage. The trouble today is that you have no money to remedy anything and they don’t have the time needed to implement them, maybe even think about them.
To the cheerier side of life in oil and gas, only three producers of our sample of 23 have issued their second quarter reports. What I’ve always been surprised about is that as bad as I make it out to be in the industry they’ve always seemed to shock me during these reporting periods. All I can say is that it may be a good idea to seek shelter, this is going to get ugly. The producer bureaucrats however are oblivious and uncaring of the situation that has and is going on around them. “We’ve seen it all before, that’s the way the business is, boom or bust and you learn to live with it.” I found a particularly disappointing article being posted on
Forbes that showed this attitude clearly. The author who had over 20 years of experience in oil and gas justified inaction and summarized his commentary in tweets that note “None of this is unprecedented or is unusual. This is how the industry evolves.” Which shows the acceptance level that is common throughout oil and gas. “Muddle through” is the religion, and its DNA. 5 of the last 34 years were “good years,” for the bureaucrats who run the producer firms. For everyone else it was moderately successful. Those 29 bad years were never acceptable to anyone as far as I could tell. How could anyone justify losing money, destroying capacity, capabilities and people’s lives. People, Ideas & Objects
White Paper seeks to establish an additional standard that we have no right to take from our future generations these oil and gas resources by using them in wasteful ways. The only rightful way in which we can do so is to ensure that we’ve produced them
profitably everywhere and always based on a reasonable accounting of the costs. The exercise, the activity, the function of the industry over the past four decades has been about what?
The three producers that we’ve analyzed for the second quarter of 2019 produce over 1.8 million boe / day. Have capital assets listed in property, plant and equipment of $134.4 billion of their balance sheets $170.8 billion in assets. Debt totals $96.3 billion leaving $72.9 billion in equity. Note Anadarko has now achieved the much sought after negative retained earnings the industry seeks and cherishes. Recording $528 million of lifetime losses. If we apply our pro-forma adjustment, which we discuss in the
White Paper, to the property, plant and equipment account. An adjustment to reflect that the amounts in property, plant and equipment, are better classified as 35% assets in the traditional sense and 65% as the unrecognized capital costs of past production. Then their assets are reduced from $170.8 billion to $83 billion, $13 billion short of the total debts and $14.5 in negative shareholders equity which is a bonus when you’re just trying to eliminate positive retained earnings.
Arguments continue with producers claiming these are assets and everyone outside of the industry noting the extensive and chronic destruction of value that has occurred over the past 20 years. We have always claimed that financial statements should reflect their intended purpose, that being the organization's performance and not its market value. And that is what we are asserting here. And in support of our argument and in our defence, it is also always necessary to write down the assets value to the lower of cost or market value. Therefore as reflected in our pro-forma adjustment, these producers aren’t worth anything from a performance point of view. The key takeaway from this discussion is that these three producers generate 1.8 mmboe / day, not mom and pop organizations.
Now to the point about time and the inability to purchase it. Cash is king they say and no more so than in oil and gas. My projections are that collectively the sample of 23 producers will have extinguished their working capital. Currently the three producers with these “assets” and production profile have working capital as a percentage of annualized cash flow of 0.775% or about three quarters of one percent. This contrasts to the working capital in the “bad” year that 2016’s Year End realized of 54.854% of cash flow. Everyone likes to run around and say that the producers have a lot of cash. Which in some cases could be considered a true statement. However working capital is a much more reasonable number in determining what the status and health of the organization is. If you liquidate all of your short term investments, inventories and accounts receivable and add those to cash, then deduct all of the short term liability of the producer you’ll determine the working capital. What you’ll find is that organizations can’t liquidate their short term assets outside of cash and short term investments. And the amounts listed in short term liabilities are for debts that have been incurred this quarter for the things the producers have already purchased. Therefore they may have money, just as their credit card still has the same line of credit that it had when it was first issued, its just that it’s all been spent.
In a display of the rational mind of a producer bureaucrat and the business logic that they employ. People in Calgary are being subjected to the full brilliance that has been on display, in my opinion, for the past four decades in oil and gas and the primary reason we are in this mess. First these producers began with the layoffs. Next they were able to offload the office space that they used to house these former employees. Calgary has an office vacancy rate that has exceeded 30% for at least the past three years. This caused the City of Calgary to lose a substantial portion of their tax base and therefore they’ve had to shift that base out to the small businesses that populate the rest of the city. In some cases taxes have been raised 400% on these small businesses. Which isn’t an issue because no one visits those businesses because the people were laid off. Here is where the brilliance comes in. Calgary has what’s known as the SaddleDome which was built for the 1988 Olympics, seats 19,289 people, fifth largest in the NHL and is in good shape, albeit a public facility. The oil and gas based Flames owners want a new one, an arena of their own, sort of speak. And they want the city to pay for it. Just as other cities have paid for other arenas excetera. Therefore the city is being held hostage for $275 million for the building of a new arena next to the SaddleDome that will seat almost 19,000 people. Is this tone deaf or just the irrational actions of a group of oil and gas producers who are going through spending addiction withdrawals? I think it’s reflective of both but also the oblivious nature of how they’ve done business these past four decades.
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