Some Tough Love, From a Friend!
Two quick points before we get into our actual post today. The first is I’ve made a mistake. I misstated that the SEC was allegedly investigating Exxon for their asset valuation. I should have stated that the SEC was investigating Exxon for their alleged asset valuation misleading investors. Clarified now. The second is in reference to any investors that may be looking for witnesses to testify against the officers and directors of the producer firms they lost their money in. Or anyone else that’s incurred a loss for that matter. When these litigants need witnesses for their litigation against the producer bureaucrats. A lucrative resource for their cause might be any of the accounting people that would have worked in oil and gas over the past number of decades. They could testify that bureaucrats' attitude toward accounting has been to pay the bills. At any point in time when the needs of the business were asserted it was literally “shut up and pay the bills.” There was never any opportunity to say otherwise when they would assert, as we noted in our White Paper “Profitable North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” On page 10 “The release of reserves value through further drilling is the business and the only business as far as the culture of the industry is concerned. The nuance of recording and reporting the accurate timing and recognition of capital costs of exploration and production are not a topic of discussion when “everyone” is following the SEC’s regulated requirements and are “building their balance sheets” faster than “we” are. What we do know is overreported profits begets overinvestment, and overinvestment begets overproduction. Especially when no production discipline exists.” And on page 26 how producers “were able to miraculously and retroactively reduce their production costs by reinventing the ‘historical’ aspect of historical accounting.”
Now onto the post.
The coronavirus may be less of an issue at some point in 2021 and as a result less impactful as a viable scapegoat to our good friends the oil and gas bureaucrats. OPEC+ will feel less obligated to deal with the demand issues and resume their focus on earning back their market share. The strength of the North American producers has been well documented through our ongoing series of blog posts “These Are Not the Earnings We’re Looking For.” The six other crises that we recently listed which producers are facing are imminent and well in play. These collectively form an existential crisis to the North American energy industry. From the producer bureaucrats we hear that all is well as far as the great science experiment is concerned. The business of the business is in shambles but that is what they need to say in order to cover off and continue the scam that they’ve been perpetuating.
The value represented in a barrel of oil is not being appreciated or considered by its consumers. In order to avoid the development of alternative sources of energy, producers have discounted the price of oil by not recognizing its total capital costs of exploration and production “to ensure that alternatives are not developed.” This capital cost discount had been financed by the producers' investors until they became wise to the bureaucrats' methods, and were at the expense of the financial health and sustainability of all the North American industries involved in its supply. Future generations will look to the fact that decades went by where oil and gas was sold substantially below the costs of exploration and production. In fact, little more than the operating costs were being captured appropriately. Unprofitability has been chronic and is now clearly represented in the financial statements of the current producers in their disproportionate and obscene bloating of their balance sheets. All oil and gas in North America should always be produced profitably to ensure that it is not wasted and a financially healthy industry is passed onto future generations. Neither of those two responsible actions have been undertaken by these bureaucrats. Consumers gain the benefit of 23,200 man hours of mechanical leverage from each barrel of oil. Which costs them substantially less than the equivalent cost of bottled water. Where is the logic and where are our priorities? It will be the most prosperous and powerful economy that consumes the most energy from all of its sources. Who will be the first to eliminate the use of fossil fuels in their life by moving to the mountains to replicate the caveman era? As that is what we’ll be faced with should the capacity and capabilities of the industry and service industry continue to erode and take on a steeper trajectory and greater momentum. These graphs from the Wall Street Journal should clarify the efficiency and effectiveness of clean energy. It appears to me that the lack of recognition of the cost of capital in the production of energy may not be just an oil and gas bureaucrats issue.
These graphs reflect the effectiveness of energy investment in alternatives is unquestionably a farce. Making the argument that bureaucrats have been making that they must ensure that alternative energy sources do not become competitive appears to me to be self-serving and only a veiled justification for their poor management. Or as I prefer to call it, one more in a long list of viable scapegoats. It also brings into question the motivation and cause of the producers, when People, Ideas & Objects raised the point of their culpability, liability and guilt last summer. How they ignored the issue of overproduction since at least July 1986 and the solution to that in the form of the Preliminary Specification since December 2013. In which we saw their only actions to our claims were to first increase their insurance coverage of officers and directors liability and then to reconfigure their “strategies” to be “clean energy” and “zero emissions.” I would question if clean energy’s substantial demand for capital is not just a new method to fleece investors for additional investment dollars? Either way if they’ve chosen to pursue clean energy they should not be using oil and gas revenues to finance these changes? Please recall too that the “Noncarbon” sources indicated in the graph above include hydro and nuclear power. On the oil and gas side of the equation, it would only be fair and reasonable for me to point out that the North American producers have been active in identifying new drilling sites.
Back to the issue at hand, which is the comprehensive financial collapse and loss of control of any aspect of the industry in North America. Bureaucrats' only concern is what I’ve learned to appeal to, their personal financial compensation and risk, as these are the only concerns that motivate them into action. For the past four decades this motivation has been nothing other than the creative and innovative ways in which they’ve been able to feather their nests. The business of the business could only atrophy to such an extent when no one cared or was distracted while watching other things. This has been at great cost to the industry as they’ve done so at the expense of any productive action and some vigorous accounting sleight of hand. Instead of taking their life long siesta in their well compensated nests, they’re stuck in these creations of their own demise. If they leave the producer firms they’ve so destroyed, they’ll lose their ability to control the resources necessary to manage their destiny if things do spin out of control in terms of litigation from the damage they’ve done of which they’re solely responsible for. So they sit and wait for what we’ve documented in terms of the oncoming industry difficulties. As the crises multiply and “muddle along” provides less and less of a covering excuse. The next two months could see any number of triggering events that sets their personal downfall into motion.
At this time the 2020 financial statements have been prepared by the management based on their activities. This being the first in a litany of really bad years where things only get much worse each and every day. Their audit firm, or as we like to call them Chesters, are beginning to realize they too need to recognize their role in the demise of the North American producers. Rubber stamping financial statements has been a great business for the purposes of feathering one's nest. The accounting firm's concern now is that the SEC is allegedly investigating Exxon and the shale producers for their asset valuations. The issue that we believe triggered the destruction of the North American oil and gas industry. What was Chester’s role in the enabling of the industry to pursue “building balance sheets” as the only justification of its existence? Just as it was the over capitalization issue that triggered the demise of Bernie Maddoff, Bernie Ebbers and Jeffrey Skilling. Therefore we may see these accounting firms seeking to regain their lost credibility in the form of forcing large write downs and issuing a heightened number of “going concern” comments.
Capabilities and capacities were what I warned about and began research in how to enhance the Joint Operating Committees involvement in the broadening of those capabilities and capacities as early as January 22, 2007. That blog post discusses the work of Professors Richard N. Langlois and Nicholas J. Foss in their paper “Capabilities and Governance: the Rebirth of Production in the Theory of Economic Organization.” However, that 2007 blog post of mine did not address the security and augmentation of the bureaucrats personal executive compensation and therefore was deemed to be irrelevant. I raise the capabilities and capacities as it is one of the crises on our list. An interesting turn of events has begun in 2021 for the North American oil and gas industry. It is noted in this World Oil article that others have lost interest. Again this is not a big deal for the bureaucrats as they’ve become used to it. Back on August 26, 2020 we posted the quote from General Shinseki which I’m glady providing again today.
It’s not for me to suggest that the North American oil and gas producers have become irrelevant. They’ll be the ones that are in the best position in order to make that determination. I only cite this as the level of deterioration in the industry has hit somewhat of a record low, I would say. I am also unaware of any other industry that was able to attain this level of irrelevance and yet produce a product that is so critical to the way of life for everyone in society. Buggy whips made a transition to this level of irrelevance but everyone could see that they did in fact lose the ability to provide value to anyone. That is not the case today. The need for oil and gas for at least the next century is a guarantee. Oil and gas may not be as resilient as coal but could be! The point of the argument is that the irrelevance is solely the responsibility, accountability and inaction of the bureaucrats. In this case the exclusive club that consists of the C-suite as they are known and the Boards of Directors who have prospered so handsomely. It’s not just their irrelevance it’s also their lack of credibility, that no one trusts them anymore and after the litany of excuses, blaming and viable scapegoats, no one believes anything either. What they’ve done is fundamentally betrayed everyone of their stakeholders through the lack of real profitability. Which is what every primary industry needs to sustain itself and those secondary and tertiary industries need in order to maintain their capabilities and capacities too.
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, everywhere and always. 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, Parler or Gab @piobiz, anyone can contact me at 713-965-6720 in Houston or 587-735-2302 in Calgary, or email me here.