Expect A Wave Of Consolidation In The Oil
Industry
By Leonard Brecken
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June
29, 2015
As stated previously, asset monetization by small E&P operators will
start in earnest in the second half of this year out of cash flow
necessity. Most, if not all, smaller market capitalization companies,
public or private, are still free cash flow negative (operating cash
flow less capital expenditure) and only a few of the larger ones are
now, or will be, based on guidance. The point is, with volumes
languishing (and probably poised to decline) tied to a flat oil futures
price curve and with economics marginal at $60 per barrel, many E&P
operators find themselves running through hedges in 2015 and still in
need to finance their already reduced capital spending.
With
Wall Street unwilling to lend anymore and prospects of fall credit line
redeterminations looming, further reducing liquidity, it is likely small
E&P operators will turn to either mature producing asset sales or, more
likely, to undeveloped assets which require more capital spending. We
are seeing this being factored into stock prices as we speak, as small
cap E&P valuations have collapsed to 4-6 times the Enterprise
Value/Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization
(EV/EBITDA) from 6-8X EV/EBITDA. This not only reflects solvency risk
but also the natural course of bringing assets to a price more in line
with their underlying sale value.
Wall Street is famous for
getting public prices at levels that magically make deals happen and,
with better funded E&P companies trading at substantial premiums vs. the
leveraged ones, this is what is occurring. Take the collapse of Goodrich
Petroleum (GDP) as a prime example as to what is now taking place and
what will continue through the latter half of this year. Here is a
company with $100million in liquidity but who continues to be free cash
flow negative on current strip pricing in 2015 & 2016. However, it has a
capital spending budget of $100 million for 2015 and 2016 and a free
cash deficit of $60 million-$80 million in each of 2015 and 2016
depending on asset price assumptions. To plug the hole it hopes to sell
its Eagle Ford assets this year.
This isn't intended to make a
case on GDP but to demonstrate the quantifiable ongoing stupidity of
perpetuating models that aren't self-funded which were being fueled by
easy money from the Federal Reserve. This also demonstrates how the OPEC
strategy of maintaining an oil price ceiling is affecting U.S. E&P
companies, forcing a consolidation which I believe will be unprecedented
in size and scope. This will eventually improve the industry cash flow
break even points, based on improved cost and scale and, as a result,
cast doubt over the long term viability of the OPEC strategy. It appears
the Saudis, despite being educated here in the US, have neglected their
capital market & economic classes as we are witnessing the E&P model
self-correcting itself. State run oil companies don't do this very well
and usually fail to adjust to price movements while free market
capital-based societies do.
The revival of the US oil industry
will occur after the upcoming consolidation and will reduce the number
of cost inefficient players as well as the short selling in group while
ultimately, self-healing the industry by improving cash flows, given the
likelihood of oil remaining below $100. I fully expect valuations to
expand in 2016, once the wave of asset sales starts in the months ahead.
These operators with plenty of cash will be the biggest beneficiaries.
On a final note, listening to the Federal Reserve yesterday it
was clear that the pressure on the dollar rise is being lifted as they
now realize that, despite attempts to fudge economic statistics, the US
economy is in recession and rate hikes are a farce based on hope and
little else. Expect the dollar to weaken considerably, breaching the
2015 lows thus supporting oil prices now and into 2016. This reality is
not baked into expectations and the 1-2 percent dollar correction which
took many by surprise is only the beginning.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Expect-A-Wave-Of-Consolidation-In-The-Oil-Industry.html
***
Share this article with your facebook friends