Were Beavis and Butt-Head Elon Musk's Heroes?
We see in Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s response to the Canadian truckers that running away, hiding and not addressing the issues is as effective as covering your eyes, stomping your feet and yelling in kindergarten. Whether it’s politicians, the media or those that actively seek to deceive others through poor or no accountability, this tactic may have been effective at one time prior to its overuse and abuse. We are today witnessing that chickens do come home to roost. It’s a new day and there seems to be new rules coming into play, the benefit of the doubt is no longer being extended, and for those that took that opportunity in the past are no longer being given the time of day. This fourth quarter seems to be a time in which serious questions are being asked of what’s happening in oil and gas and the future of the North American producers. We’ve seen this past decade of oil and gas being more or less a lost decade and the curious are thinking, maybe it’s time to revisit the industry and approach it differently. Let’s look at the natural gas market and determine if events are shaping up to provide for a positive future as would otherwise be hoped for?
We have three graphs from the February 3, 2022 EIA Natural Gas Weekly Update that describe different aspects of the U.S. natural gas marketplace. The first is natural gas storage volumes showing that natural gas demand remains healthy and the response by producers may have been inadequate to maintain the volume of storage that was traditionally expected. Specifically, on December 31, 2021 storage volumes were 528 BCF higher than the five year minimum and dropped in the course of four weeks to less than half that at 228 BCF above the five year minimum on January 28, 2022. The steepness of this drawdown is significant as it represents a somewhat flat footed response by producers to maintain production volumes. Mid to late March is the time in which storage begins to refill and the amount of storage that may be drawn down during the next 7 - 8 weeks may become an issue.
Our second graph shows the total number of rigs drilling in the U.S. With this volume of activity, the question needs to be asked if this will provide the turnaround needed to meet the renewed demand and refill the probable depleted storage volumes? The apparent answer at this point is no, it will not.
Our last graph shows what appears to be a break between the response in the producer's activity level and the price of natural gas. Prices are breaking upwards while active rigs are remaining at levels that appear to be too low to have an impact.
What is the cause of this lack of response by producers? Bureaucrats would suggest that the amount of dividends and stock buyback programs are causing them to divert their cash to those causes. This is self-serving and an admission that the bureaucrats have not rehabilitated themselves from their spending addiction. Businesses generate profits that are adequate to meet the needs of the business, which happens to include all aspects of the business, and to compete in the capital markets. It's not an A / B choice, it's C All of the Above. The reason they don’t have the cash resources is due to their flat footedness and refusal to act in terms of reacting to the changing environment of their business over the past 4 decades. Bureaucrats may also claim they haven’t the field capabilities and capacities necessary to conduct the necessary level of activity, the service industry has just not kept up. Which is true, drilling companies were never successful in their diversity initiatives in the restaurant business. The fact of the matter is that while these bureaucrats were enjoying their party they didn’t pay any attention to the business. It has atrophied all of the value and as they have done throughout this protracted period they have blamed, accused and generated viable scapegoats of everyone and everything, other than themselves. The fact that industry doesn’t have the financial wherewithal and it doesn’t have the ability to conduct the field activity is true. These are symptoms of their chronic mismanagement that I’ve documented with the fallout consequences predicted would happen. They’ve had alternatives.
Would producers be having the difficulties they’re having if they had the appropriate ERP systems? I’m not in any way blaming the current ERP systems providers. They’ve done stellar work in impossible conditions due to the fact that producer bureaucrats have wanted to and starved them financially so that producer accountability was never discovered or discoverable. The fact that investors have pointed out that oil and gas producers must obtain tier 1 ERP systems as a precondition for their return is not a comment towards the ERP providers in the market today. It is the understanding of the dynamic that producer bureaucrats have created where accountability is as impossible to determine as can possibly be achieved.
There is a wall of common sense and logic that has betrayed the bureaucrats each and every move these past four decades. What should have been done was always circumvented by taking the short term opportunity without any understanding of the consequences it would cause. We have moved from self-inflicted crisis to self-inflicted crisis and back again in a comical act of “building balance sheets” and “putting cash in the ground.” The sad part is that it has gone on for so long that the majority believe it. It is culturally ingrained and the way they do things. They can only laugh at those that don’t follow this prescribed script. What today's graphs show about the natural gas market in North America is that it will soon be influenced by the global natural gas market. European natural gas import prices averaged $28.26 U.S. for the month of January. LNG will continue to have the effect of taking what was a continentally priced commodity and making it a globally priced commodity.
Even with the endowment of shale North American producers will not be able to respond to the demand for production. Leaving the prospect of much higher prices being realized across this continent. Some may ask if that’s not what People, Ideas & Objects have been suggesting should be what our future should be? Hardly, higher prices are the necessary component of a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable industry and for all concerned. Higher prices are also the reallocation of the financial resources towards innovation. With our good friends the bureaucrats nothing of the like will occur. No one will be prospering in the industry as a result of the continued litany of decisions whose consequences were never considered at the time. Our current self-inflicted crisis is this legacy of hedging that has gone on since the April 2020 covid induced oil price crash. These shenanigans have the potential to bring the industry down quickly.
At some point today EQT will publish their fourth quarter report. They are the largest U.S. natural gas producer and have found themselves in a bit of a dilemma when it comes to their hedging practices. EQT are not part of our sample of producers that we analyze and I am generally unfamiliar with them and their operation. After the third quarter report I only noticed that their hedging losses had dropped their net revenues into negative numbers totalling $775 million for three quarters of 2021. They’ve also recorded a net $4.3 billion current derivatives liability. Indicating this would be coming due before September 30, 2022. I don’t have the requisite understanding of the derivatives market to understand what strategy EQT is employing. It appears to me that they’re seeking to mitigate their downside risk of natural gas prices going below $2.20 and $2.32. The volume of gas under these contracts is considerable at a total of 4.5 TCF of gas over the course of next three and six years.
With respect to the derivative commodity instruments held by the Company, the Company hedged portions of its expected sales of production and portions of its basis exposure covering approximately 2,554 Bcf of natural gas and 5,146 Mbbl of NGLs as of September 30, 2021 and 1,955 Bcf of natural gas and 3,462 Mbbl of NGLs as of December 31, 2020. The open positions at September 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020 had maturities extending through December 2027 and December 2024, respectively.
With these volumes and prices over this period it is clear that EQT assumed that in an unchanging natural gas market they expected to obtain the least viable level of their perceived definition of profitability as acceptable. With the dynamic changes in the prices of natural gas, the upside of their natural gas business will be paid to others. However, royalties are paid on the price realized and at $28 the royalty will cause EQT’s net price to be far lower than the hedged price and that will be before any other capital, operating or overhead costs are recognized. I do not see this as an ideal situation. In addition, working capital of EQT is not what would have been expected of a producer seeking to mitigate its risk. They are the proud owners of negative working capital of $3.9 billion. A large part being the liability to the hedging contract, which brings up this interesting difficulty that the company may be faced with. (Note, EQT current rating by Moodys is speculative at Ba1, which is one step below the defined investment grade Baa3 of the contract.)
Certain of the Company's OTC derivative instrument contracts provide that, if the Company's credit rating assigned by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. (Moody's) or S&P Global Ratings (S&P) is below the agreed-upon credit rating threshold (typically, below investment grade), and if the associated derivative liability exceeds the agreed-upon dollar threshold for such credit rating, the counterparty to such contract can require the Company to deposit collateral. Similarly, if such counterparty's credit rating assigned by Moody's or S&P is below the agreed-upon credit rating threshold, and if the associated derivative liability exceeds the agreed-upon dollar threshold for such credit rating, the Company can require the counterparty to deposit collateral with the Company. Such collateral can be up to 100% of the derivative liability.
The question that needs to be asked is in the context of the next self-inflicted crisis. Where do the hedging liabilities fall in terms of the call on the resources of a bankrupt producer? If the derivative liability is invoked, what effect will that have on the company's other debt covenants?
Producer bureaucrats chose to take the least profitable opportunity by locking the firm into the hedging contract. While actively choosing to ignore the opportunity to work hard and build the Preliminary Specification and our user community to rebuild a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer firm. An opportunity that has been available to them since 2012 and at a comparatively minimal cost to the firm, though it would disintermediate the bureaucracy. Therefore who is going to commit to be the first to fund the Preliminary Specification and our user community? And how? People, Ideas & Objects budgetary roadblocks I’ve instituted are the realities of the situation the bureaucrats have created for all participants in the tier 2 and tertiary industries supporting oil and gas. There are no opportunities for any investor returns in oil and gas ERP systems. Therefore this is my dilemma and around and round we go. No one in oil and gas ERP has made any money for investors. How would I suggest that I would? I also need to deal with the fact it is software which banks are violently allergic to. Therefore the bureaucrats have created a situation where they’ll never be held accountable or need to deal with their rolling incompetence. What I see is a lack of concern for the decisions that are made, but then they’ll muddle through. The continued waste of natural resources is tragic in the least. A close read of history will show that once organizations have been destroyed in this manner, and I would suggest that their ability to understand how to make money is their deficiency, they’ll never come into being again as viable, prosperous contributors to the greater good. It’s good to know that Beavis and Butt-Head had at least the oil and gas bureaucrats looking up to them.
On the other hand we have no shortage of work to do. Much needs to be done in the next few years. The Preliminary Specification needs to be built. The engineering and geological explicit knowledge needs to be captured as Intellectual Property and developed. New oil and gas firms need to be formed, capitalized and organized. Assets need to be transferred to these new producers in innovative, strategic and tactical ways. In this process we’ll all be helping the current producers to travel faster down their chosen journey to clean energy by disposing of dirty oil. This transition to the Preliminary Specification is something that must be done to deal with the financial difficulties the industry is plagued with from the current administration. This also needs to be done as preparation for the future. And to learn from the experience of this transition as we’ll be faced repeatedly with situations that share this same scope and scale of change in the near future of this business. We’ll therefore be somewhat prepared and experienced in challenges of this nature. Please review our Production Rights to see how everyone can participate in making this new oil and gas industry happen. An industry where it will be less important who you know, but what you know and what you're capable of delivering, what the value proposition is that you’re offering? We know we can, and we know how to make money in this business.
Those interested in joining our user community are People, Ideas & Objects priority and focus. The Preliminary Specification, our user community and their service provider organizations 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, everywhere and always. In addition, our software organizes the Intellectual Property of the exploration and production processes owned by the engineers and geologists. Enabling them to monetize their IP for a new oil & gas industry to begin with a means to be dynamic, innovative and performance oriented. Providing a new investment opportunity for those who see a bright future in the industry. A place where their administrative, accounting, exploration and production can be handled for the 21st century. People, Ideas & Objects have joined TBD and can be reached there. Anyone can contact me at 713-965-6720 in Houston or 587-735-2302 in Calgary, or email me here.