Energy & Commodities

Oil & Gas: “Robust ricing scenario ahead”

The worst may be over for companies and investors who have weathered the depressed gas prices of the past few years, but that doesn’t mean it’s clear sailing from here. In this interview with The Energy Report, Robert Cooper, senior energy analyst with Haywood Securities, talks about the need for selectivity and patience for catalysts that can crystallize underlying stock values. It’s a battle of long-term investors versus short-term traders.

COMPANIES MENTIONED : CHEVRON CORP. : CONDOR PETROLEUM INC. : CROCOTTA ENERGY INC. : ENCANA CORP. : EXXON MOBIL CORP. : NOVUS ENERGY INC. : PETROCHINA CO. LTD. :ROYAL DUTCH SHELL PLC : TALISMAN ENERGY INC. : TAMARACK VALLEY ENERGY LTD. : YOHO RESOURCES INC.

The Energy Report: Looking back to your last interview with The Energy Report in November, you seem to have called the bottom in gas prices correctly. What’s your view of where things are headed now?

Robert Cooper: We expect a reasonably robust pricing scenario ahead. Here’s why: In 2013, we will likely see flat natural gas supply growth; this will be the first year in the last several that this will be the case. The natural gas rig count is at 350, the lowest since 1995. The declining rig count has taken its toll on almost every U.S. shale basin; the only basin that’s growing is the Marcellus, and it is growing partly because infrastructure constraints are being alleviated. Unless productivity undergoes another massive step higher, or drilling time is cut in half again, rig count matters as a predictor of natural gas production levels. Natural gas liquids (NGL) prices are weak, and this impacts the ability of explorers and producers (E&Ps) to reinvest at the same level as even a year ago. This further reduces the probability that capital will be redeployed to dry gas plays.

TER: Your May 9 report shows gas storage 28% lower year over year and 5% below the five-year average. What are the implications of that?

RC: It means the gas market is in deficit. If I were an end user who was short gas, I’d be worried—the conditions are in place for a gas price rally that could catch me unaware.

TER: What do you think the chances are of that happening?

RC: I wrote in March that we’re looking at CA$4 per thousand cubic feet (CA$4/Mcf) gas in Canada. We got to around CA$3.89 on the spot market, and the strip in the winter was very close to CA$4. If it’s a normal summer, I think there’s a better than 50% chance of hitting that CA$4 level in Q4/13 or Q1/14. I also said in our last interview that if you give me normal weather, I can give you CA$4/Mcf gas, which was the case.

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TER: How low do you think gas could go again, in the next year or so?

RC: I never say “never,” but I wouldn’t bet on a return to last year’s $1.90 price low or anything close to that. Right now, we have a favorable storage situation and we have long-term beneficial factors working in the gas market bull’s favor.

TER: What do you see on the horizon for oil? Do you expect oil to be range-bound up to $105 per barrel ($105/bbl)?

RC: The economy isn’t strong enough to support $100+/bbl oil for very long, nor will supply costs support prices below $80/bbl for very long. Unless there’s a big change in the economy toward much stronger or much weaker growth, that range is probably what you can look for in oil prices.

TER: Storage and distribution capacities are key factors in determining North American oil prices. How are you reading those indicators?

RC: In Canada, the bulk of our oil supply growth is slated to come from the oil sands. We need pipelines to transport that. But in the short term, midcontinent refineries are scheduled to complete turnarounds this summer, and that should firm up heavy oil prices relative to West Texas Intermediate (WTI). Infrastructure, or lack thereof, has certainly been a dominant theme in the Canadian oil market, certainly for the past year or so. Oil by rail has been an important bridge, as it has allowed product to move from where it’s produced to where there’s demand while bypassing infrastructure constraints. The development of oil by rail has been a textbook case of the invisible hand of the market at work.

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TER: What’s your view on the Keystone Pipeline? Will it be built?

RC: That’s the million-dollar question. President Obama is under considerable pressure from environmentalists who believe oil sands development is the main bogeyman contributing to global warming. But the U.S. has had a goal of achieving energy security since Nixon, and Keystone would move the U.S. a lot closer to this goal—that would be an important legacy for any president. In addition, Keystone is important for the U.S./Canada relationship. Rejection of the pipeline could be problematic for bilateral relations and would likely push Canada to increase its energy involvement with the U.S.’ strategic competitors in Asia. If I had to guess, I’d say Keystone will ultimately be approved, but likely with some quid pro quo that will be an attempt to pacify the president’s environmentalist support base.

TER: How has price action for oil and gas impacted the companies you cover?

RC: The volatility has, at times, removed the incremental and marginal buyer from the equation. In particular, foreign investors have looked at Canada and said, “I’m just going to buy Brent exposure or pure WTI exposure and avoid all of this price differential and pipeline risk.” And they have. So access to capital for Canadian producers has been limited, especially for the small- and mid-cap companies, thereby limiting their strategic options. Ultimately, if this volatility continues, it will result in further culling of the investable universe.

TER: So it’s going to be survival of the fittest?

RC: More or less, yes.

TER: What companies have been your best performers over the past six months?

RC: Because the market has been so bleak, the best performers have been ones we’re trying not to lose money on, unfortunately. In my last interview, we talked about Crocotta Energy Inc. (CTA:TSX),Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd. (TVE:TSX.V) and Novus Energy Inc. (NVS:TSX.V). Crocotta and Tamarack are in roughly the same spot as when we last talked. Both have executed well on their business plans, and both have advanced the ball in developing new plays and properties. Each has performed quite well in a miserable market. Consequently, we still recommend both. They both have very strong management teams that are heavily invested and are motivated to do the right thing for shareholders.

Novus is a little bit of a different story. The consolidation we discussed in west central Saskatchewan’s Viking area was fast coming and, indeed, has accelerated as expected. Novus has decided to participate in that. In late November and early December, it announced that it was considering methods for optimizing shareholder value, including a corporate sale. That process has been ongoing, admittedly at a slower pace than anticipated. But investors will see an answer one way or another. The Board of Directors is expected to decide which direction the company will be heading, potentially as soon as the end of the month.

TER: Another company you talked about is Yoho Resources Inc. (YO:TSX.V). Can you give us an update?

RC: Yes. Yoho’s stock price has basically remained flat since the last time we talked. However, all of the underlying fundamentals continue to improve. Its core position is in the Duvernay play, in the Kaybob region of Alberta. The Duvernay, in our view, is fast becoming a world-class shale play as it continues to mature. Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM:NYSE) recently purchased Yoho’s partner. Since we last talked,PetroChina Co. Ltd. (PTR:NYSE; 857:HKSE) bought a 50% interest in Encana’s Duvernay acreage, the best part of which is proximal to Yoho. This was a multibillion-dollar transaction. Yoho has continued to drill good wells that have been on cost and at expected rates. It’s taken a little bit of time to gestate, but ultimately the Duvernay is going to become the domain of much larger companies. Immediately proximal to Yoho is Chevron, Exxon, Encana Corp. (ECA:TSX; ECA:NYSE)Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM:TSX)and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE). Yoho is a prime takeout candidate. It has a sustainable business plan with well over $1 billion ($1B) of future capex to drill in the Duvernay alone, so this company could be around for a long time. But in our view, it will ultimately be purchased by a larger player. We expect Yoho will be a winner for investors who have a slightly longer time horizon than tomorrow.

TER: How about some new names that you’re covering that look interesting?

RC: We’re very big fans of a new company called Condor Petroleum Inc. (CPI:TSX) run by a very experienced group of managers who came out of the supermajors, Chevron Corp. (CVX:NYSE) in particular. The President and CEO, Don Streu, is a serious individual who managed very large projects for Chevron in Angola, Indonesia and Nigeria. Condor has taken a very different approach to exploration in Kazakhstan by gathering an immense amount of three-dimensional (3D) seismic data to derisk drilling. This is something that hadn’t been done there before and it has paid off. Condor recently announced a large discovery well and is appraising it as we speak.

Condor represents one of the best risk-reward tradeoffs we can find. Well costs are very low—appropriate for a company its size, and yet the targeted prospect size is very large. So there is a whole lot of torque for shareholders. Condor has a fully funded balance sheet. It sold a noncore gas property for $88 million ($88M), has an active exploration program and is pursuing joint ventures with much larger companies for its largest and most expensive prospects. The main caution is that in Kazakhstan, business proceeds at a slower pace than in North America because of the large government bureaucracy and lack of developed infrastructure, especially in the rural parts of the country where Condor operates. So this is a true investment rather than just a trade.

TER: Where is the stock trading now, and where do you think it’s going?

RC: It’s a $0.50 stock today. We have a $1.10 target on it.

TER: What’s the level of political risk in Kazakhstan?

RC: Any place outside of North America is not going to have the same sort of risk profile as we do at home. What I can say about Kazakhstan is that there is a very large and onerous bureaucracy in place because it is a deliberate attempt to stymie corruption. Kazakhstan is rapidly growing and has broader ambitions than to just be a regional player, such as joining the World Trade Organization. It’s certainly not for the faint of heart, but on the other hand, we think that the risk-reward tradeoff for Condor is well in your favor right now. Condor’s management team is full of individuals who have operated in the country’s oil and gas sector before, which is an essential consideration. Kazakhstan has immense potential for oil and gas development and Condor knows how to operate effectively in that environment. So we recommend the stock.

TER: What’s your general advice at this time for investors looking for potential profits in the oil and gas sectors?

RC: I’d recommend that you do your homework and that when you buy, ensure you have a margin of error with respect to valuation. And have patience, because this is a very jittery market. Ultimately, good companies with good assets—purchased at good prices—tend to pay off over time. But if you have a very short time horizon, you might not get that opportunity to see the value creation. There is some very good value in the oil and gas sector in Canada right now, but it also takes time for catalysts to emerge to crystallize that value. That takes an investor as opposed to a pure trader.

TER: Good advice, Rob. We appreciate the opportunity to talk with you again.

RC: Thank you for having me.

Robert Cooper, CFA, is a senior energy analyst based in Calgary with a focus on Canadian oil and gas exploration and production companies with domestic and international operations. Robert has more than 10 years experience in the investment industry and has been covering the Canadian oil and gas sector since 2006. Robert is a past president of the Calgary CFA Society.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Zig Lambo conducted this interview for The Energy Report and provides services to The Energy Report as an independent contractor. He or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Royal Dutch Shell Plc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Robert Cooper: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Crocotta Energy Inc. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Crocotta Energy Ltd., Yoho Resources Inc. and Condor Petroleum Inc. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

 

Silver surges 6.8% from lows…..

….after slammed 10% lower in 4 minutes.

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,353.75, EUR 1,051.95 and GBP 890.86 per ounce.   Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,376.75, EUR 1,069.15 and GBP 903.62 per ounce. 

Gold fell $22.20 on Friday to $1,364.90/oz and silver closed at $23.632.

Silver fell victim to heavy, concentrated selling overnight in thin, illiquid Asian trading. Silver was slammed 10% and fell from $22.36/oz to $20.30/oz in just four minutes — from 23:05 GMT to 23:09 GMT. 

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XAG/USD Spot Exchange Rate – 1 Day (Tick)

Silver has recovered 7% of the price plummet and is now down 2.7% today at $21.60 an ounce. 

Silver’s weakness may have contributed to gold falling 1% to $1,354/oz.

It is likely that the very aggressive selling in illiquid Asian markets overnight was by a large hedge fund or bank or a combination of hedge funds and banks with deep pockets. Reuters quoted an analyst at a Japanese bank who said that silver’s price falls were due to one “unidentified investor.”

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…..read page  HERE

Michael Campbell & Josef Schachter on Oil & Gas

Michael grills Josef on his 40 years of expertise on Small to Mid-Cap Oil & Gas Companies. Audio directly below:

{mp3}mtmay18josefhour1{/mp3}

 

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US Oil Boom Taking Turn Towards Quality

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Washington this week has been engulfed in the natural gas export conundrum, with a Senate energy committee’s first in a series of natural gas forums starting off on 14 May. They’re just testing the waters here, but next week we’ll get down and dirty on this one: the entire meeting will be devoted solely to the natural gas export question.

What we’re really waiting for here is the confirmation of Ernest Moniz as the new energy secretary. This will be the decisive moment, and the confirmation hearing is next week. While Moniz has remained tight-lipped on the issue, the general consensus among analysts is that the new secretary will support an expanded US natural gas export initiative. Things will become clearer next week … so stay with us.

On the crude oil side of this equation, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has also weighed in: The verdict: the US should stop dragging its feet and let the crude flow as US oil production continues its sharp ascent.

It’s a bit of a regulatory dilemma, since the 1979 Export Administration Act banned the sale of US crude abroad, with the exception of exports to Canada and Mexico. But it’s not 1979 anymore, and the shale boom has rendered these old restrictions unsuitable. If crude export restrictions aren’t addressed, the IEA says, the industry will find a way around them at any rate. The loopholes start with processed products that can no longer be considered “crude”.

The world of big energy acronyms had more in store for us this week, with the US Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) release of new data showing that developments in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling have contributed to the rise in US oil output to 6.5 million barrels/day in 2012 from just under 5.7 million bbls/d in 2011.

Back to the IEA’s 2013 Medium-Term Oil Market Report … the agency is boosting its forecast for non-OPEC oil supply growth to 3.9 million barrels/day from 2012 to 2018, with the US accounting for 1.4 million bbl/d and Canada 1.3 million.  

But we’re not just talking about quantity. The US oil boom is taking an unexpected turn towards quality, as well. The boom is actually boosting production of light, sweet crude and field condensate, not just heavier, sourer grades. Of course, this also means a bit of a headache for refineries that were putting all their eggs in the heavy crude basket.

And if you haven’t been following our coverage of the conflict in Syria, you should. This is all about petro-politics, the more so with the passage on Tuesday of a dubious Qatari-Saudi-sponsored resolution that will effectively rule out any dialogue with Assad.

In this week’s special report below we borrow from our premium publication and look at why Geothermal is starting to really heat up and a couple of stocks that investors should be keeping an eye on. More below…

I hope you find the below piece of analysis interesting and once again I urge you to take a look at our presentation on the value of energy intelligence over energy “information” and why there really is no comparison between the two when you have access to genuine on the ground intelligence – you can see the presentation here (again I urge you to read to the end to get a full understanding of the benefits.)

Have a great weekend.

Best regards,

James Stafford
Editor, Oilprice.com

 

Is it time to buy the Japanese yen?

I would say the answer is a resounding maybe!

I once said that John Percival, editor of the Currency Bulletin, has likely forgotten more about currency trading than most of us will ever know. I have been a reader of John’s newsletter for over 20-years. I have learned a great deal from him, through his writings. Here is an example of his insights which I took from a very beaten up copy of his book, The Way of the Dollar, published back in 1991.

In all markets, price extremes are usually attended by a consensus that the trend, be it up or down, will continue; and by a peak of speculation in line with the trend. Hence the excruciating paradox of financial markets, that sentiment is most bullish at the peaks when prices have only one way to go which is down; and most bearish at troughs vice versa: at the top there’s no one left to buy, and at the bottom no-one left to sell. This paradox is absolutely central to working of financial markets and we need all the help we can get to understand it so thoroughly that it becomes part of our nature. The more bullish things are, the more bearish they are.

Bullishness is born as hope in the midst of despair. Hope swells to confidence and confidence swells to euphoria, and the process contains the seed of its own destruction and the birth of the opposite, fear. Fear is nurtured by falling prices and the two feed on themselves until they swell to despair. And so the cycle is completed—and ready to begin again with the birth of hope. This is the way things are and the way they have to be. We haven’t understood the process until we have grasped that. The despair creates the price trough: the price trough creates the despair. The price extreme is the definition of the extreme of despair, which is in turn, by definition the moment when hope comes to prevail; hope feeds and is fed by rising prices until the peak of price and euphoria leave prices with only one way to go, which is down. This circular process underlies every price fluctuation in free markets from the smallest one measure in seconds or minutes to the largest measured in years or decades. So it has always been and so it will always be, because it must be.

 

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Why am I sharing this? It’s the pre-requisite for my little quiz. Can you think of a currency now that seems to fit within John’s paradigm of a price extreme? If you said the Japanese yen, I would agree. Here’s why…

1. Every commentator worth his “gift of hindsight” now thinks the yen is toast into eternity. Keep in mind, eternity is a long time and there can be a lot of ebb and flow in between.

2.

I am not sure it is accurate to say that “everyone who wants to be short yen is already in the trade,” but I think we are darn close to some type of sentiment extreme based on open interest levels in the Japanese yen currency futures.

a.

Two points to consider in the Japanese yen futures chart below:

i. Remember how the EVERYONE told us that it was a virtual “layup” trade to go short the yen and use those funds to buy some other higher yielding vehicle, aka the yen carry trade? Well, those “gift of hindsight” commentators failed to see the global credit crisis dead ahead. Before this carry trade viciously unwound, we saw an all-time high in open interest levels in Japanese yen futures; that did indicate that everyone that wanted to be short really was short.

ii. Fast forward to today. Everyone seems to hate the yen. And though the open interest positioning is quite as extreme, it is the highest on record except for the carry trade unwinding period. So, it is fair to surmise we are near some type of extreme. Mr. Market loves extremes. Mr. Market loves one-way bets. Keep this in mind the next time Kyle Bass tells you it is “guaranteed” the yen will weaken more. He may be right. But during a trend it’s often difficult to separate luck and brains. That is not to suggest Mr. Bass isn’t brainy. Indeed he is. He tries hard to prove it, as he talks about such things as duration and convexity in Japanese government bonds. And if that doesn’t impress you, I don’t what would.

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Is that it Jack? Is that all you got? Well, no. I have a little chart that I shared with the Members of my Black Swan Forex service today that indicates just maybe something called “yield differentials” are changing in favor of the yen. We can’t forecast interest rates, as Mr. Percival is fond of saying. And even if we could, we can’t be sure of the currency reaction. That being said, this correlation change in US versus Japan yield spread is interesting and should give all those yen bears something to think about:

Keep in mind the chart below is in $-yen terms (spot forex market); that is opposite to the chart above which is the futures market, which is in yen-$ terms…

US 10-yr – Japan 10-yr Yield Spread versus $-yen: This chart shows the yield differential is still positive for the US but now moving in the Japan’s favor. Also notice till recently the tight correlation between USD/JPY (yellow line) and this spread? Is it time for $-yen to catch up on the downside?

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Is it time to buy Japanese yen futures or sell USD/JPY in the spot market? The short answer is a resounding maybe. I think we can say a few things with some confidence (but never with as much confidence as the “gift of hindsight currency analysts” that don’t really trade currencies for a living):

1) 2) 3) 4)

We are either at, or very close to, a sentiment extreme in the Japanese yen. The yield differential for the yen is improving based on the 10-year benchmark The Japanese economy is growing again and faster than expected Money is flowing into Japan to get access to Japanese stocks and growth

Given that set of variables, the probability of at least some multi-week change in trend could be in the making. And that’s all we can ask for. For in the end trading is simply a probability bet. Nothing more and nothing less…

Jack Crooks Black Swan Capital www.blackswantrading.com info@blackswantrading.com