Exploding Myths, Part VII
No one can predict the future, but I can state unequivocally that the bureaucrats can’t, won’t and will not ever make the changes to remedy this situation. The Preliminary Specification disintermediates them and they have it too comfortable at this time. They have the revenues of a primary industry flowing directly into their pockets! Why would anyone give that up? This logic also applies to them undertaking any changes themselves. At any point in these past decades they knew what had to be done, then why didn’t they do something? It just hasn’t been in their best interests. Hence my chronic discontent with the situation that is occurring today in the industry. I see serious issues being played out with the damages and their consequences taking many decades to resolve. Challenging our advanced way of living. A way of living that we may not have a full understanding or appreciation of the substantial role that oil and gas provides. Does anyone still believe the bureaucrats will be the ones that show the way to a prosperous energy future?
I would argue the cultural inertia of the bureaucracy can not be overcome. Creative destruction is the only method to establish a culture that will focus on the most profitable means of oil and gas operations everywhere and always. The industry believes that reducing its costs, an engineering based business model, is the only way to fame and fortune. Overproduction, oversupply and oil and gas commodities as price makers are not relevant to the situation at hand. They won’t accept that there is no magic cost reduction on the horizon that will make these commodities profitable in today’s price environment. Squeezing people and suppliers a bit more, as has been done for the past four decades, will continue to be the modus operandi of the bureaucrats. It’s all that they know and all that they do. What we do know is that each incremental barrel of oil is more difficult than the one before. The costs of exploration and production will not be going down as we continue to produce the technically easiest barrels to produce. The Preliminary Specification ensures that all of the costs of exploration and production are recognized in a timely manner to ensure that the industry is profitable and prosperous. What is today’s plan?
The next shoe to drop may be the fourth quarter financial statements. We anticipate on the basis of what has been published that Chevron and others are recognizing large asset write downs of natural gas, particularly in shale based reservoirs. These natural gas write downs will be precipitated by two aspects that are outside of the control of the producer. The natural gas prices are in a state of collapse, rendering a lesser value to the reserves. And the amount of shale based reserves that qualify as commercial will therefore be reassessed using these prices, reducing the actual reserves of the producers. Therefore the amount of remaining reserves that the independent engineers report provides will be incapable of carrying the hefty natural gas costs recorded in property, plant and equipment. We have argued that these capital costs are really the unrecognized capital costs of past production and should have been recognized many decades ago, but that’s just our opinion.
Which brings us to the myth that we wish to explode today. That being the costs of depletion and impairments recorded on the income statement, as far as the producer bureaucrats are concerned, is irrelevant. “That’s history, the money was spent years ago and it’s irrelevant today, no one concerns themselves with these ‘accounting’ numbers.” These write downs will not preclude the producers from saying that they’ve been profitable and will continue to claim that they’re generating free cash flow. I turn to what is now my favorite graph that accurately reflects the attitude of the producers. Their attitude is they’ll consume capital that the investors and bankers have graciously provided. When accounting capitalizes everything and hence everything that is reported is profitable, you have a scam. When that sliver of capital that is recorded as depletion on the income statement, and it is of no concern to the bureaucrats, you have an advanced scam whose culture is the scam. This chart shows their alleged break even point and the price in which they would shut-in production. Note that their understanding of break even is flawed towards their cultural scam. In the Preliminary Specification we would shut-in production at the point where they note that costs breakeven. That breakeven point would include the capital, royalty, operating and overhead. Or the marginal cost. Not the operating cost which is what the bureaucrats represent in this graph, and the point where they would shut-in production. Which as far as I know no oil or gas production has ever been shut-in due to the financial performance of the property.
Let’s not kid ourselves you can goose your earnings by capitalizing everything like the receptionists time, telephone service and Post-it-Notes, and get away with it for a long time. The fact is however those over reported earnings will have to be offset by losses at some point during the firms lifetime. Pursuit of the biggest balance sheet is a contest that can’t survive forever. Eventually those bloated balances of property, plant and equipment become disproportionate to the rest of the organization and demand recognition at a faster pace than what would otherwise be the case. This alone may be the reason for the high number of write downs that we’ve seen over the past decade. There is also this graph that shows this trend may be well entrenched at this point. Making the bureaucrats business model all the more untenable.
Of course bureaucrats will take offense to being called scammers. They have now established a record of performance that is reflected poorly in the chart below. Recall during these periods that producers did not at any time recognize the appropriate amount of capital in the costs of the commodity to the consumer. Accumulating capital in property, plant and equipment as if it is a cherished commodity. Having investors therefore subsidize the consumers consumption of energy by never including the appropriate amount of capital into the price of the commodity in a capital intensive industry. The game is almost up now. The trickle of exits from the C-Suite started in late 2019 and it has become policy, it would seem, not to pay any of your “unsecured creditors.” When everyone isn’t paying it's hard to be identified. The producer organizations have limited lives remaining. Companies such as Chesapeake who’ve declared they’re not a going concern, who’ve had their bonds downgraded to a Probability of Default rating and whose $0.57 stock is trading below the $1.00 threshold necessary to maintain its listing on the NYSE. It’s their belief that these carcasses that will rise up to make the future of the industry what it has to be?
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 American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 Telegram @piobiz or Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.