Showing posts with label oil shale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil shale. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Continuing Oil Crash Points The Way To 2015's Energy Bargains

The second coming of 2015's oil bear market is going on right about now.  Plenty of bargain hunters who thought they bought into the bottom of the oil rout a few months ago are having buyer's remorse.  Watch Brent fall to 49 today and WTI fall to 43 as Saudi pumping cuts the legs out from under US shale producers.  Energy stocks can still get cheaper.  Finding the ones likely to survive this bear market takes serious sleuthing.

Forget about hunting junk bond bargains.  The oil services sector in the US is not done culling its own herd.  Junior producers are still pumping at full volume just to make it look like they can service their high-yield debt with cash flow.  That charade still has a few more months to run.  Any hedge funds or well-heeled private investors who think energy sector junk bonds have bottomed are welcome to try their luck.  Some people learn the hard way.

Other oil targets abound.  Owning BNO means betting on Brent crude futures and owning USO means betting on WTI crude futures.  Any compression between the Brent and WTI spot prices reduces the potential for arbitrage between these two ETFs.  More exotic bets like DBO and USL look like very complicated ways of leveraging a single commodity price.  Simple securities have fewer risks than complex ones.  The ETFs and other instruments betting on the magnitude of changes in oil prices have more moving parts than I can track.

The least complex ETF for exposure to the oil producing sector is probably XLE,  Holding a representative sample of large energy producers means each producer's operating costs are diversified away.  A simple equity ETF also has no internal leverage, so it does not expose its owners to exorbitant expenses or magnify their losses.  The P/E of 22 still looks high and resembles the broader equity market's high P/E after years of central bank stimulus.  A weakening sector should be priced at a bargain to the broader market, so XLE may have further to fall.

The price of oil itself may have further to fall.  Saudi Arabia is not reducing its production.  Storage is full in the US and shipping companies are seeing booming business in chartering tankers just for offshore storage.  Iran may have already begun selling the oil it has stored and will certainly increase production later in 2015 as the end of sanctions allow it to export.  I do not believe oil traders have priced in the effects of full production from Iran and other Middle Eastern countries that badly need hard currency.  More pain for the US oil sector means more bargain entry points for investors.

Full disclosure:  No positions in any securities mentioned.

Sunday, May 31, 2015

The Limerick of Finance for 05/31/15

Saudi oil pumping not slowing down
OPEC's leader hangs on to its crown
Meet domestic demand
Keep jihadists in hand
Shale producers prepare to leave town

Monday, January 05, 2015

Financial Sarcasm Roundup for 01/05/15

I launch the first sarcastic blast of 2015 with full enthusiasm.  Morons continue to drag down the human race in the new year.  They remain prominent in financial services and the sector has failed to develop a vaccine.  Here comes my antidote.

A former Morgan Stanley financial adviser grabbed a bunch of confidential client data.  Way to go, Morgan Stanley.  The firm has long been rumored to have some of the weakest internal controls of the major brokerages.  Regressing a couple of tech generations back to punch card data records might be an improvement.  The only thing dumber than trying to openly sell an employer's proprietary data would be to sell it for Bitcoin.

JPMorgan Chase threw in the towel early when investors sued them for currency manipulation.  I expect the other banks to follow JPM.  It gives regulators a signal that settling their other probes into banks' bad behavior is the cool thing to do.  Institutional investors can live with a given amount of wrongdoing as long as they get a payoff.  Bank traders learn that anti-trust manipulation has no real consequence other than a slightly higher cost of doing business.  The whole charade is pretty sick.

Many high-cost oilfields are about to turn off their pumps.  The US rig count is turning into a downward spiral.  The oil shale boom was fun while it lasted.  The rookie wildcatters will take it on the chin because they aren't moving quickly enough to lay off workers and shut down wells.  The drillers who have survived prior bear markets will hunker down as their dumber competitors disintegrate under the weight of high yield bonds they can't pay back.  The biggest winners will be the oil supermajors who can shift production to their lower cost wells.  I expect the majors to buy failed shale projects cheaply in 2015 just to book increases in their proven reserves.

I promised on New Year's Day that Alfidi Capital would continue its sarcastic tone.  I shall not disappoint my readers.  

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

Alfidi Capital Attends IPAA OGIS San Francisco 2013

I'm not a member of the Independent Petroleum Association of America but their events have great value for me as a market analyst and commentator.  I attender their annual Oil and Gas Investment Symposium (OGIS) San Francisco last week.  I'll address each of the presenting companies in future blog articles.  This particular article is about concepts that apply to the entire energy sector.  The OGIS participants use these ideas frequently.  Understanding these ideas enables understanding of a company's value.

First of all, IPAA has some phenomenal statistics available for free.  I had previously relied on the Energy Information Administration's data but the IPAA data sets are excellent companion pieces.  IPAA also advocates maintaining tax breaks for oil and gas exploration on its Energy Tax Facts site.  I'd prefer to eliminate any and all tax breaks for energy exploration because the market needs to price the all-in cost of energy production.  I would also eliminate breaks for renewable energy because its costs have pretty much reached grid parity.  Eliminating both severance taxes and depletion allowances would make the non-renewable energy sector's project economics more transparent.

Let's talk about hedging for a moment.  Lots of hydrocarbon producers like to hedge the price of oil with futures contracts.  Exploration and production (E&P) companies in the upstream sector hedge against declines in the price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude because a price drop will hurt their revenue.  I can see how operators who have committed free cash flow to a capex program would not want to see their drilling interrupted by commodity price swings.  Hedging makes a bit less sense for operators who have committed to a perpetually rising common stock dividend.  That kind of corporate policy can hamstring management and set investors up for disappointment if the hedging strategy cannot sufficiently protect earnings.  Most E&Ps hedge most of their projected production.  Swaps seem to be the most popular instrument but some companies use costless collars.  That's my anecdotal impression, anyway.

Energy REITs and MLPs also hedge prices (again, to support their expected dividend) and some of them even hedge interest rates because they borrow to acquire new producing properties.  They hedge prices to make their payouts more predictable.  Investors have to live with that predilection, but it makes less sense to me than producers who hedge prices.  Do E&Ps hedge interest rates as well as prices?  They certainly borrow for capex.

I'm agnostic on whether North American oil producers should hedge their production against WTI prices or Brent prices.  It may depend on where the companies market their crude.  Crude shipments to the Americas are often priced in WTI quotes while production in Asia and the Middle East is priced in Brent.  The Brent-WTI spread matters to investment banks, hedge funds, and energy traders whose arbitrageurs play the price differential.  Bloomberg has a decent rundown of common energy prices; arbitrage away, hedgies.  The CME Group has the most transparent energy derivative prices I could find, including contracts for both WTI and Brent.  Futures and other derivatives have enormous risks and I've never used them in my own portfolio.  I would rather leave them to energy supermajors who have complex value chains to hedge.

MLPs have it easier than E&Ps.  Older wells with long, slow decline curves fit MLPs very well because they need little additional capex other than basic maintenance.  That's why MLPs use debt to acquire existing wells rather than putting in capex.  I agree with the common MLP claim that low barrel per day (bpd) producing wells are ideal for their structures.  I've heard some MLPs describe their avoidance of incentive distribution rights (IDRs) as a selling point to the investing public.  I really think MLPs will have a field day buying low-producing shale wells at cheap prices once the Bakken boom fades away.

Some E&P companies tout their natural gas liquids (NGL) production.  Investors need to remember that NGLs are more difficult to hedge because they require longer futures contracts (about 12-18 months).  A web search for "NGL derivatives" did not reveal any central exchange for them that I could find, but some energy trading firms specialize in constructing private swaps for NGLs.  The lack of liquidity for these financial derivatives means NGL swap prices can easily affect real-world NGL prices.

Energy MLPs do have to worry about Unrelated Business Income Tax (UBTI) and they report this on the K-1 form they send to their investors.  I had previously thought that holding a high-yielding MLP in a tax-advantaged retirement account would be a smart move until I realized that UBTI may trigger a tax liability.  Index funds and ETFs that invest in MLPs do not have this UBTI drawback for an IRA.  An MLP that produces zero or negative UBTI poses no apparent problem for an IRA.  It pays to know the rules in IRS Pub 598 and it pays to read an MLP's documents.  I am not a tax advisor, so don't ask me what to do.

If you're sick of hearing about fracking and horizontal drilling, there's a new drilling technique called "down spacing" coming along.  Drillers down space by decreasing the space between wells in an area, which is slightly different from the "pad drilling" concept that erects more than one well on a given land plot.  These two approaches fly in the face of one of shale gas's selling points, namely that one drill rig per pad enables the minimum possible surface disturbance.  Increasing the rig count on a project also accelerates a field's decline rate.  Shale producers need to think hard about how much they can spend on additional engineering to expand recoverable deposits before they go hog wild into down spacing and pad drilling.  We're all going to hear a lot more about enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques and ways to minimize sub-surface non-productive time (NPT) as more shale plays hit their very steep decline curves.

I don't worry about whether producers have drill-to-earn, produce-to-earn, or shoot-to-earn clauses in their farm-out agreements.  Either they produce or they don't.  I'm interested in bottom-line results.  I don't worry about land value capture because the financing of infrastructure servicing oil/gas fields is less important than whether said fields are economically recoverable.  Held by production clauses are good to have if the producer doesn't know how long it will take to bring a greenfield project to maturity.

I'm agnostic as to whether a producer owns a working interest or the entire property; their job is to spend capex on production and someone has to pay the costs of owning wells.  I do care about MLPs that focus on royalty interests (especially overriding ones) because that limits their lifetime capex commitment.

Geologists analyze a project's porosity, resistivity, lithologytotal organic carbon (TOC), permeability, and isopach subsurface data.  I don't look at those things because I'm not a geologist.  I'm a finance guy and I need to see financial data.  All of the eyewash on soil engineering that energy companies put into their investor relations pitches means nothing if they don't have a budget to turn exploration into production.  Geological characteristics will determine the amount of stock tank original oil in place (STOOIP) and its estimated ultimate recovery (EUR).

The EUR of a project deserves a special.discussion.  EUR is a mix of oil, gas, and NGLs that is always measured in BOE.  Proven reserves includes several engineering terms that do not necessarily comport with financial terms allowed by US securities regulators.  Progressing from 1P (proven) to 2P (probable) to 3P (possible) reserves may impress some investors but it does not impress regulators.  The SEC has very definite rules for what can and cannot be included in reserves reported in financial statements.  This is why producers break down their 1P reserves into proved developed producing (PDP), proved developed non-producing (PDNP), and proved undeveloped (PUD).  Using estimates of proven reserves only is the most conservative way to calculate a project's valuation.  That's why I read the 43-101 reports of junior resource companies that are registered in Canada.  The 43-101 regime allows for "proven and probable" (2P) reserves that I can use to find a valuation.

It's good to know the Baker Hughes US rig count to track the energy sector's health.  Producers need to know the day rates of rigs in their region.  Analysts track the recycle ratio of an energy company, which the companies themselves often quote as the netback.  I have not yet used a recycle ratio in my analysis of energy companies but I will try to apply it in the future.  It may even apply to renewable energy companies if it can be measured in kilowatt hours.

I shake my head at shale oil producers who allow their natural gas production to flare off instead of trying to capture it.  That is literally money going up in smoke.  Producers who care about maximizing ROI on their projects should be willing to spend the capex needed to install temporary pipelines and storage systems that will enable them to capture gas that would otherwise flare off.  Orphan gas gets plenty of attention in the midstream sector.  Too many shale producers have their eye on the steeply declining production curve and want to get a cash return as quickly as possible.  They need to to think more about how capturing extra gas production from a shale play will increase a project's long-term value when it's ready to be sold to an MLP.  Don't ask me to figure the difference between wet gas and dry gas; that's a problem for petroleum engineers.

The great thing about reading my blog is that all of the knowledge I gain at conferences and investment seminars is here for free.  You people should be entertained by my discussions.  I'll take my bow, thank you very much.  The next set of IPAA events will give me more opportunities to show off my knowledge.  

Thursday, September 05, 2013

Americas Petrogas Plays For Shale In Argentina

I'm all about energy today.  Americas Petrogas (BOE.V / APEOF) wants to pull oil and gas out of shale formations in Argentina.  I believe they have a very competent and experienced management team.  I like the fact that they have deep-pocketed JV partners.  I like the fact that they've discovered light sweet crude deposits, which are easier to refine.  I like that maps of their project areas show good coverage by existing pipelines.

One concern I have is that this is in Argentina.  That country is #102 (out of 174) on Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index and #160 (out of 177) on the Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom.  The political risk for any foreign investment in Argentina is enormous.

The company had just under C$26M in cash on hand as of June 30, 2013 according to their quarterly statement. Their net income has swung from a loss to a positive in about one year.  I'm less concerned with burn rate for a company at this stage provided their revenue is growing and their operating costs remain stable.

I'm adding Americas Petrogas to my watch list.  It deserves a more serious look once I can calculate its intrinsic value based on their proven (P90) and probable (P50) reserves.

Full disclosure:  No position in Americas Petrogas at this time.  

Monday, November 26, 2012

Synopsis of the San Francisco Hard Assets Investment Conference 2012

The San Francisco Hard Assets Investment Conference is my favorite trade show ever.  It was different this year with the exhibitors split between two levels at the Marriott Marquis but the seminars and workshops were phenomenal.  I'll provide my recaps of the many platform speakers from November 16-17 below.  The bold words indicate wisdom I find worth applying in my own portfolio.

First up on Friday morning was Mickey Fulp, Mercenary Geologist.  He took questions on his stock picks and other topics.  He likes Athabasca Uranium and thinks that the SEC's probe into Molycorp is likely minor but will hurt other REE miners like Tasman Metals and Quest Rare Minerals.  One guy in the audience threw out a random question about some movie called "Wall Street Conspiracy" that alleges organized crime is involved in uncovered shorting.  Mickey thinks you have to find ways to make money in the markets anyway, although I think there's enough manipulation to make that difficult.  Another guy asked about the disconnect between the price of gold bullion and gold mining stocks; Mickey uses the Toronto (TSX) Venture Exchange as a proxy for junior gold producers.  He thinks big miners are now looking at dividend strategies and junior miners have underperformed because risk averse investors are dumping speculative stocks.  Some clueless nutcase asked about a "billionaire gift tax;" Mickey had never heard of it and neither have I.  When asked whether he likes silver producers, Mickey said he usually reviews silver companies that find silver deposits with base metals but would like to find a stand-alone silver company.

Jonathan Moore from Summit Business Media welcomed everyone to officially kick off the conference.  Being an active participant is what I'm all about but the rest of the folks needed to hear it from Jonathan.  He mentioned a couple of incentive games they had but I left those to attendees less fortunate than me.  

Paul Van Eeden gave a keynote talk on "rational expectations."  His take on monetary policy is radically different from what you'll find in most gold bugs' newsletters.  He is correct in stating that the Fed will do anything to prevent deflation and that collapsed lending demand has destroyed the multiplier effect that would normally drive inflation.  I differ with him in my expectation that this depressed multiplier is not at all a permanent condition.  I expect some artificial stimulus to lending demand, probably from home mortgage modification programs.  Anyway, Paul thinks the gold price's expectation of inflation is likely irrational because real world inflation hasn't fulfilled that expectation.  I say just wait long enough for policy to force lending and gold will get all the inflation it expects.  Paul also thinks gold, silver, and copper are still in a bull phase while every other metal has crashed (thanks to China's overbuilt infrastructure).  He thinks junior stocks are acting like the prices of base metals because investors are losing their risk appetite, making them attractive buys.  Paul concluded with his bullish case for the U.S.  He said our high unemployment rate means labor is available, our low interest rates are good, and low energy costs from fracking and horizontal drilling are attractive.  Maybe so Paul, but those interest rates won't stay low for long so any major producer that wants to buy a junior had better do so right now.  

Adrian Day was up next, pondering whether miners have a tough road ahead if the resource boom is over.  He noted that central banks have not restructured the balance sheet expansions they launched in 2008.  He cited the U.S. Debt Clock's figures for how much the average American taxpayer owes in unfunded liabilities, which as of his address at the conference was over $1M/taxpayer.  My SWAG-type estimate leads me to believe the Fed will be comfortable with a prolonged level of high inflation that reduces that liability to around $10K, or 1% of the present relationship.  I have no historical basis for this estimate other than my impression that the average American won't tolerate outright cuts to entitlement programs and so policymakers must indulge this attitude by letting inflation do the job.  Of course, the attendant second-order effects from high inflation won't be anyone's fault.  I really need to get off this soap box and back to Adrian, who BTW said policymakers will do all it takes to keep interest rates low so the interest payments on government debt don't spiral out of control.  He noted that many central banks are reducing their dollar holdings and that commodities move in long cycles as major economies industrialize and urbanize.  I disagree with one thing Adrian said when he claimed China is still growing.  I think their whole "industrialize and urbanize" phase is pretty much ending as they hit a demographic wave of peak earnings and wring debt out of government-backed development entities.  I got over the China bull story even though it took me a long time to realize their numbers are fraudulent.  Adrian's a smart guy and I'm counting on him to see the light soon.

I listened to Jeb Handwerger share some ideas from his newsletter.  Here's one astute observer who notes that a significant portion of the U.S. population pays no income tax; he said two thirds but the exact number is up for debate if you include those who pay some state income tax.  Jeb notes that Europe's socialist/Keynesian policies led to austerity and revolts, and that this is soon coming to the U.S. thanks to our entitlement programs (bingo, I agree).  Jeb intrigued me when he said the fiscal cliff deal is already done in Washington and the public rhetoric is just politics.  When you think about it, all Congress has to do is send the President a bill delaying the implementation of the year-end automatic cuts indefinitely.  Presto!  Cliff averted, can kicked, problems unresolved.  I also agree with Jeb's statement that this means the Fed will print a way out of the fiscal cliff.  He expects gut-wrenching hyperinflation to bring exponential gains to hard asset investors within a decade.  Jeb picked up on something I've been seeing with increasing regularity since I started attending these shows, namely that new resource discoveries are getting harder.  I even see that in weekly roadshow presentations from exploration companies that get excited over a few tenths of a gram of metal they claim to have found.  Folks, these discovery dearths will drive major producers to acquire solid junior producers.  

Keith Schaeffer told us that oil is worth a lot, natural gas is worth less than oil, and we can expect a boon for oil services.  The Marcellus boon is enormous.  Low inventories and rising production should support oil prices.  Distillates are important to the world economy and demand for them remains high.  New gas finds often have value-added products.  A global policy shift against nuclear energy makes LNG attractive.  No new refineries are being built in the U.S.  He mentioned some stocks he likes because bottlenecks at refineries make them attractive, plus they pay dividends.  I'll compare them in a separate blog posting once I have a chance to view their ROEs and other fundamentals.  Good job, Keith.  

I didn't spend much time with the exhibiting companies' pitches in the main hall but one had a funny tag line.  The guy from Bullfrog Gold made my day when he said, "Bullfrog Gold is ready to jump!"  That's a classic.  I have no idea whether that's an accurate assessment so maybe I should cover them in a separate blog post.

Benjamin Cox from Oren Inc. gave an absolutely outstanding workshop on using data from financing rounds to evaluate a mining company's viability.  Ben once worked for D.E. Shaw and brings a much-needed quantitative voice to the cottage industry of junior mining.  His nuggets of wisdom came fast and furious and I enjoyed listening.  Here it comes, line by line.  A mining project that provokes NIMBY bumper stickers will likely have permitting problems.  Management must work 70 hours per week.  Companies repeatedly financing for small amounts with large dilution are problems.  Inelastic demand for a commodity makes it desirable for mining (hey, I'm thinking there's hope yet for silver and rare earths).  Zinc is useful in galvanized products for infrastructure so no zinc means buildings rust and fall down (listen up, China).  The massive $5T in capital tied up in steel milling makes coking coal indispensable (well, I think there's more to it than that, like demand for steel and aluminum products, but it's an okay starting thesis).  I was very intrigued by his admiration for co-branded mining companies because they can share supporting resources; I see these mining companies all the time but it seems to me like they're stuck between spinouts.  Viewing them as mini-conglomerates puts them in a whole new light but let's not forget how the inefficiencies of conglomerate mergers in the 1970s put the whole "sharing resources" theory through a major wringer.  

Benjamin continued on a roll by mentioning free tools investors should use:  Google Earth to view a property's geography; USGS Mineral Resources Program to learn about metals; SEDAR for viewing Canadian public company filings; the Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom index to assess political risk; and common sense.  He was of course pitching Oren's paid notification services but much of the data he used to walk us through mining deal financing was free of charge.  Here comes more free wisdom from this sharp guy.  Successful financing closes indicate a company that's executing its business model.  Brokers are rational and charge more to raise money for harder projects.  Broker fees are thus indicators of a project's difficulty. A fully subscribed book indicates success.  A short time to close a deal is good, and so is an oversubscribed deal.  Companies can review Oren's tear sheets to see if a broker fits their deal by average deal size, number of total deals, and percent of deals with warrants.  A bought deal is a broker's promise to close a financing round with its own money, and for Benjamin that's a useful indicator of a broker's confidence in a company's prospects.  

Benjamin surprised me when he said he likes companies that pay management decent salaries because real talent doesn't come cheap.  Management that works for free indicates little value added.  The exception for him is a management team that owns a big stake in their company because they're getting paid in equity.  That's actually in line with Silicon Valley metrics for tech startups.  One thing I like about Oren's model is their use of this data to find troubled deals, then examine the company from a vulture investor's standpoint to see if they have quality hidden assets worth buying.  Man, this talk was a joy to behold because it's so rare to see a serial entrepreneur lay out a value creation philosophy with multiple applications.  

It wouldn't be a hard assets show without a keynoter from James Dines, legendary analyst and employer of attractive female models.  He was in classic form, sticking with his prediction of a further slowdown in China.    He expects China to spark a dollar crisis when it reduces its dollar holdings for gold to bail out its insolvent banks.  I'm skeptical of global warming, so I have a hard time swallowing his admonition against buying sea-level real estate.  I further doubted his claim that rare earth mining stocks will recover after tax-loss selling.  Come on James, a slowdown everywhere will keep REE demand down.  He sees the U.S. government becoming the world's largest landlord with housing bailout programs.  I think James is counting on more foreclosures while the Fed retains ownership of massive amounts of mortgage-backed securities to make that prediction come true.  James is obviously a precious metals fan but warns us not to keep precious metals on our person or in our homes (yeah dude, that means you have to trust a bank vault instead).  James predicts a whole bunch of disruption from online learning, religious wars, regional separatism, cyberwar in World War IV, and a U.S. police state.  He restated the main geopolitical thesis from one of his books, that political activity oscillates between whether the state or the individual is supreme.  He also plugged Photocyclops, his reprint service for his fine art photography.  I had no idea he was into taking pictures, but then again his models provide some great scenery.

Rohit Savant from CPM Group broke down the costs of production, 50% of which is labor.  The lead times of bringing new mines online mean supply changes will lag changes in operating margins, so profits rise or fall ahead of supply changes.  Metal prices are the most important factor driving exploration spending.  Country risk is the largest risk in mining.  The dental sector is the third largest source of gold demand but palladium is becoming a more cost-effective substitute.  A recent sharp rise in cash costs squeezed margins across the mining sector, explaining why gold mining stocks have underperformed bullion.  His figure that 90% of gold from primary mines had a cash cost of less than $1052/ounce leads me to believe that many gold producers can survive as long as fear of inflation keeps gold prices high, even though they'd be unprofitable in normal times.  

I skipped Ian McAvity's address because I heard enough of him in the past and I don't need to hear him anymore.  I instead went to hear about Precious Metals Warrants but after forty minutes I realized I had heard precious little about how to invest.  I did hear that currencies will engage in competitive devaluation at some point but with no indication of which those would be.  I also heard praise for limit orders, which I consider to be amateur's tools.  I stopped using limit orders years ago when I figured out that selling options could accomplish the same thing and even generate cash.  I'll blog the stock picks I heard separately.  

Rick Rule was the next keynoter.  This guy is one terrific salesman.  If I were running a brokerage I'd show recordings of his talks to the sales force because he can spin any macroeconomic environment into a bullish argument.  Rick used a sales sign analogy to argue that people are good at shopping for goods on sale but not for financial assets.  He thinks we're in a cyclical decline within a secular bull market for commodities because supply constraints will persist from a lack of exploration.  He thinks the "return-free risk" proposition of Treasuries is questionable (I agree, which is why I no longer own fixed income).  Rick expects to see takeovers in the gold sector; it produces a Carlin trend equivalent annually with no replacement from discovery.  He laid out Sprott's three criteria for buying a mining stock:  NPV greater than enterprise value of the company plus the capex of its mine; an IRR greater than 25% (ideally 30%); and a payback period of three years or less.  He finished by noting that a company's timeline from preliminary economic estimate to bankable feasibility should be about two years, as this progression adds value and allows for arbitrage by investors.  My takeaway from that observation is a company that can't go from PEA to feasibility in two years isn't a worthy investment.  

Lindsay Hall from RMB Group gave a workshop on commodity futures options.  She was one seriously hot chick and I wouldn't mind exploring an option in her future, if you know what I mean.  It's too bad I didn't have time to get her phone number because I was too busy taking notes in her workshop.  Maybe that's just as well, because she probably would have been too overwhelmed by my sheer manliness to focus on her presentation.  Anyway, she cited figures projecting the U.S. will still have an imported oil dependency in 2035, which contradicts the IEA's recent report concluding the U.S. is on its way to oil independence.  She devoted a large portion of her time to a bunch of scary headlines about Iran's threats to stability in the Persian Gulf.  That is too much emphasis on sensational Iranian rhetoric with no analysis of the country's order of battle or out-of-cycle force movements.  She mentioned some report that Iran successfully tested a missile that has range to U.S. bases in the region, but offered no consideration of the warhead's blast radius or circular error probability.  I think it's cute when amateurs with sales backgrounds try to frighten other amateurs.  Her pitch on option spreads made sense and even introduced the concept of an "oil CD," where you devote a portion of your capital to a bull call spread on oil futures and the rest to a CD with a matching maturity.

Louis James from Casey Research was on the platform talking about "quality, man."  He meant that engineers' economic studies on feasibility drive a mining company's quality.  A published study that doesn't move a stock's price may mean the study was meaningless.  Saying "no" to many deals is good because we can wait for Warren Buffett's fat pitch when an engineering study shows us quality.  I like this Louis guy.  I first heard him last year at the Rare Earths Summit and he's definitely sharp.

The keynote panel on up and coming stocks churned out a bunch of picks in uranium, phosphate, and energy technology.  I'll get to them all eventually in separate articles but it was cool to hear more about uranium in particular.  I did not know that the uranium market had a supply glut when Japan's reactors all went offline.

Saturday morning brought back Rick Rule for some introductory Q&A prior to the official opening of the second day.  Someone asked him about stories on fake gold bars; he mentioned that Sprott's policy is to buy only bars with well-known custodial histories and store them in the Royal Canadian Mint.  Rick senses the possibility of a psychotic break in the market and was glad he had lots of cash on hand in 2008 to use when people made panic sell decisions.  He thinks the euro/dollar ratio at 1:1 makes sense but they have two common problems.  First, they are transfer mechanisms for unsustainable liabilities in societies that have lived beyond their means.  Second, they are subject to downward manipulation (I presume through monetary stimulus).  I like Rick's florid use of language when he says interest rates area function of confidence and that Western governments are at war with savers.  I'll bet Mitt Romney would agree with Rick's statement that spenders outnumber savers and are a bigger constituency for low interest rates.  Rick was astonished that the official CPI calculation doesn't factor in taxes and doesn't account for the aggregation of debt.  I'm not so astonished myself, partly because we all have different effective tax rates and partly because accounting for unpayable debts would drive the official CPI through the roof.  I was pleased when Rick said he had a high opinion of Allied Nevada, a junior stock I owned until it doubled a few years ago.  I re-connected with one of that company's principal backers at this conference to thank him personally for doing a great job.

Rick Rule then got to the main part of his talk on how to interview the management teams of junior mining companies.  Here's my recollection of his thought process.  The first thing to know in interviewing management is that their prepared pitch minimizes management stress.  Juniors create value by answering unanswered questions.  Will they make a discovery?  Is the discovery worth anything via execution?  Junior companies are not asset plays because they typically don't have proven and probable reserves.  They're really more like an intellectual property play in Silicon Valley that needs R&D.  People are more important than property in early stages.  Rick advises us to ask CEOs about their specific skill sets and previous successes.  This will help find the Pareto 20% of managers who have the best chance to succeed.  More questions for the CEO:  Who's the second most important person in your company and why did you hire them?  What are their specific skills and successes?  What role does each director have?  Use these questions to reach an early conclusion that some CEOs just want to raise money so they can cash out.  Rick says that a small mine can't make you big money.  If a CEO seeks a more attractive deposit they can expand, ask for evidence.  Ask the CEO how they will test their exploratory thesis.  A good explanation of an execution plan helps you eliminate companies that will generate a random result rather than a deliberate one.  Another thing to ask a CEO:  If your last success was at a different location, in different terrain, with different minerals . . . what makes you think you can apply those skill sets to a project you haven't done before?  A medical analogy would be that oncology is not the same as neurology, so gold expertise does not necessarily translate to copper.  Not all mining is the same.  Rick's further questions for a CEO:  How much money must you spend on ground over a specific time period?  What's your monthly burn rate?  How much cash do you have on hand now?  Know that it takes money to answer the company's unanswered questions and succeed.  More questions:  What if limited drilling yields poor results?  Will you continue?  Most projects lose, so you need big winners to subsidize many losses.  More questions:  How will I find out about your company's success?  Via press release, or may I call you to find out results?  These answers reveal whether management thinks granularly about drill results.  Rick warns us that we'll never get perfect answers to every question.  The purpose of asking is to whittle down one's list of companies to a small list that will increase the chance of successful investing.  Rick closed by saying that his prospect generator companies have significantly outperformed.

Pam Aden from the Aden Forecast was one keynoter I did not need to hear.  She claimed we're in the twelfth year of a bull market, so I guess she hadn't heard of the 2007-2009 bear market.  Maybe she meant gold and not stocks but it really wasn't clear from her data.  She projected some charted bubble peaking in 2013, but what she meant still wasn't clear.  Her whole thesis for buying gold rested on technical analysis of channels.  Puh-lease.  That's when I picked up and left.

Chris Berry from House Mountain Partners gave a great workshop on the supply and demand fundamentals behind the rare earth sector.  I first met Chris this past March at TREM12 in Washington, DC, when I was on a panel with his father Dr. Michael Berry.  He's a chip off the old block and sharp as a tack.  He argued that each REE has its own supply/demand mix.  Problems for major REE producers like Molycorp and Lynas spell opportunity for juniors.  China's REE exports are down because global demand is weak.  Chris thinks Moylcorp's book value is greater than its market value, so its problem is management rather than assets.  He thinks that makes Molycorp a buyout target; I'm not so sure, because with earnings going negative and ROE negative for the last twelve months an acquirer would be hard pressed to add value simply by changing management.  The debt load Molycorp carries from its last big acquisition will persist.  Anyway, Chris also noted that lanthanum's record price increase last year only added one cent per gallon to the price of gasoline.  He believes that REE juniors need to raise cash with a dilution strategy, off-takes, intellectual property, and supply chain integration.  Bigger does not mean better for REE producers because they must have what the market wants; just look at Molycorp.  Well done, Chris.

Brent Cook from Exploration Insights shared his wisdom.  He said producers' margins are not increasing with the price of gold because cash costs are increasing and deposit quality is declining.  Discoveries are down significantly and annual production is outpacing new discoveries.  Majors must replace their lost production and quality deposits command a premium.  Not all deposits are identical; geology must confirm an investment thesis.  Topography determines whether mining facilities are physically realistic, and showed a photograph of steep hills cut by deep ravines as an example of an infeasible site with no flat areas for milling or heap leaching.  Brent likes prospect generators with smart business models, some of which he describes in his free articles.  His website has an excellent free report with insights into geology and mining, and a link to Sprott's free mining investment explanatory materials.

I went to Paul Van Eeden's workshop to hear more of his contrarian perspective.  He's bearish on gold because he thinks it's too expensive.  He also thinks the world has passed Peak Oil and that U.S. oil shale deposits are experiencing much more rapid decline rates than first predicted, making it unlikely the U.S. will fulfill the IEA's prediction of becoming a leading oil producer.  He sees opportunity in natural gas given its low prices but depletion rates are high.  I think Paul should read the NYT's investigative series on the shale gas bubble because it will help confirm his thesis that there's less to the shale revolution than what's advertised.  He puts the fair value for gold at $800-900/oz (I say that's still too high, far above its historical average) and openly questions valuing it in U.S. dollars given U.S. inflation rates.  I personally don't mind gold measured in U.S. dollars because I'm a U.S.-based investor, my portfolio is denominated in U.S. dollars, and my living expenses are in U.S. dollars.  Paul noted that high gold prices mean miners produce low grade ore veins first, saving high grade deposits for times when gold prices are low.  It was interesting to hear him say the Fed has stabilized its balance sheet by matching purchases of new securities with sales of ones it currently owns.  Paul is a fan of this Fed's anti-deflation strategy.  I marvel at the risk the Fed takes and wonder why it has yet to lose money on a trade.  The next couple of years will reveal whether Paul is correct to place such confidence in Ben Bernanke's PhD thesis / wish fulfillment.

Chris Gaffney from EverBank keynoted his macroeconomic perspective.  Investors now understand that Greek debt is riskier than German debt and so PIIGS interest rates have risen (IMHO hedge funds still haven't figured this out and that's why they're so dumb).  Europe's rescue fund is too small to cover a potential default by Italy (IMHO analysts haven't figured this out yet and that's why they're so dumb).  Chris thinks the euro will survive because it's too important to Germany as an export promotion mechanism.  I strongly disagree with that notion.  IMHO losing one eurozone member breaks a taboo and others will follow to avoid being the last Prisoner's dilemma victim remaining.  I'm also pretty sure German taxpayers have limits to their patience and will vote out incumbents who wantonly subsidize profligate countries' debts.  Anyway, back to Chris' arguments.  He expects the U.S. federal government to push its fiscal responsibilities onto state and local governments forcing them into their own budget crises.  He is not alone among the other gurus here in expecting a false solution to the fiscal cliff that will delay its consequences into the future.  He likes Shadow Stats' inflation measure (so do I) and notes Paul Krugman wants more inflation (revoke that man's Nobel Prize in Economics).  Chris uses the Economist's back page statistics to show how countries with high current account balances generate demand for their currencies.  He finally gets to some currency picks.  He likes Norway because it's an oil-based economy; Sweden for some odd reason I can't recall; Australia for its exports of natural resources to China (yeah, not for much longer); Canada for its strong banks; and also Singapore, China, and gold.  I can't agree with his pick for Singapore because it's such a thinly traded currency or China because I think they'll have to hyperinflate away their debts just like the U.S.  Otherwise, Chris really did his homework.

I never miss Al Korelin's address because the guy's a legend in financial journalism, although I'm pretty sure he hits the same basic themes every year at this show.  He advises us all to get information from as many sources as possible, and to be diversified even within metals and other hard assets.  He predicts the growth of U.S. government involvement in the economy will hurt the stock market and help hard assets.  He prefers to invest in companies rather than commodities because companies give him leverage (i.e., it's a truism in mining that companies with a levered balance sheet will rise faster when metal prices rise because their prospects of paying off that debt just increased mightily).  He evaluates mining companies on management, asset quality confirmed by assessment, ability to execute, and location in the world (i.e., minimal political risk).  He also thinks the current administration will favor taxing mining companies as a revenue source.  That's a scary thought, sort of like a windfall profits tax taken to an extreme for a hot sector.

I had to hear more from Louis James over at his workshop because his address on "quality, man" was so great.  I like his irony when he said President Obama's victory provides clarity with an open advocacy of higher taxes and an anti-rich mentality.  Louis thinks the precious metals markets haven't peaked yet.  I think that's a kind way of saying they're overvalued, which is why I've reduced the gold portion of my portfolio from the large concentration I had a couple of years ago.  Louis says not to panic when the market drops, just keep averaging down.  His counterpoint to skeptics who say companies can't raise billions in capex for big projects is to evaluate the project's potential returns.  Global capital markets are big enough to fund desirable projects now matter how big they look.  Louis' next piece of advice will probably fall on deaf ears but it's worth repeating.  He advises investors not to invest unless a company meets their decision criteria with high standards.  I really do think too many people will ignore that and instead give in to some great story's temptation, but Louis does the public a great service by putting this out there anyway.  Louis framed his "cash, courage, and contrarianism" approach for everyone to benefit.  Courage enables you to ignore short-term market action if you are confident in your long-term strategy.  Contrarianism enables you to buy a stock even if its price has been beaten down.  Cash allows you to make this happen.  Have all three factors and you're probably going to win, at least some times IMHO.  He added that there's no one safe place to invest in mining because it's unpopular everywhere for being dirty, messy, and costly.  His criteria for investing in a mining stock includes a 2x return in 12 months, which interestingly enough reminds me of Mickey Fulp's philosophy.  Louis also thinks the gold/silver ratio is a poor indicator of either metal's price movement.  I totally agree, and I roll my eyes whenever some analyst throws out a ratio of a metal to another metal, the DJIA, or anything else except a currency an investor must use to buy said metal.

It wouldn't be a Hard Assets show without Peter Schiff on the keynote roster.  I got my picture taken with this true icon of finance when he appeared in his booth (check my Facebook archive).  Peter went on a tour de force of the U.S. and its dollar.  Here comes my summary of this man's brilliance, with no adulteration on my part.  At some point, the Fed won't be able to fool the world anymore.  It won't be able to withdraw liquidity (by selling securities) to fight inflation.  The Fed must thus continue to lie and pretend there's no inflation.  Inflation drives up mail delivery costs but the price of stamps is fixed to the CPI.  That's why USPS is going bankrupt.  "Fiscal cliff" means we actually have to pay for government spending with taxes, not debt.  Politicians' promises aren't free and the fiscal cliff is the price we have to pay.  Even the fiscal cliff's spending cuts aren't really cuts, but smaller future increases.  The real cliff comes when the Fed can no longer keep interest rates artificially low.  Artificially setting interest rates creates distortions, especially if inflation is greater than the official interest rate.  Peter believes interest rates must rise to around 7% but this will cause pain.  The U.S. government has admitted its debt is a Ponzi structure when our leaders say the government will default if they can't raise the debt ceiling.  About one third of U.S. debt matures in a year and the Treasury plans to keep rolling it.  Big banks will fail if interest rates rise and the Fed never stress tested this outcome.  Banks profit now from the spread of the Treasuries they buy over Fed credit they owe.  Higher rates will flip that spread and destroy banks.  The deficit skyrockets when the U.S. government can't collect taxes in a recession to cover exploding spending on freebies (i.e., EBT cards for the bottom 47%).  The U.S. has a reprieve right now due to Europe's problems making the dollar relatively stronger.  If the U.S. tried to finance its sovereign debt by selling long term bonds, then long term rates would be skyrocketing.  A sharp rise in interest rates will put trillions of losses on the Fed's balance sheet.  The world will call the Fed's bluff when it takes its attention off Europe (if/when it blows up) and starts a run on the dollar.  The U.S. Dollar Index will go into freefall, consumer prices will rise, and the Fed's credibility will be gone.  Peter believes we face either  hyperinflation or a deflationary collapse worse than the 2008 crisis.  Politicians will opt for inflation because it buys them time but each round of monetary stimulus is less effective than the last.  Peter expects a monetary crisis and sovereign debt crisis right here in America.  My loyal readers know I expect a similar outcome.  The funniest part of Peter's talk came when he asked rhetorically how the Fed and Treasury will bail each other out, because Treasury is required by law to make whole the Fed's losses but the Fed is buying Treasuries!  The audience LOL'd but I was too sad to join in.  I expect the government will have to invent brand new accounting rules for itself to make that problem disappear after the dollar crisis.

The next big speaker I cared about was Dr. Michael Berry, my fellow TREM12 panelist.  I read his Morning Notes daily for insights into junior producers, and here come more of his insights with as little filtering as I can manage.  Dr. Berry believes debt and taxes are negatively correlated (right on!) and some tax increases plus austerity are likely.  It's easier to raise taxes than cut spending.  Entitlement expectations finally make deliberate debt reduction impossible (hey, thanks to the 47% who enjoy being victims).  The final curse of the reserve currency dollar is unrestrained debt issuance.  The administration will demand much higher taxes in its second term (IMHO probably a negotiating tactic for now but who knows).  "Taxmageddon" means rates up and credits down.  The non-partisan Tax Foundation publishes tax changes by state.  The effect of more taxation will be to decrease consumption and GDP.  The Fed's ZIRP is financial repression (yes indeed!), forcing savings into Treasuries.  Austerity's effect on household income will hurt the housing market.  The administration believes it has a mandate to force more taxes on the wealthy but entitlement spending is unlikely to be seriously considered for reductions.  This is all good news for precious metals, energy, and agriculture.  Investments in ordinary debt and equity markets are likely to fall.  Commodity volatility means trading opportunities (IMHO options and futures will come in handy).  Dr. Berry looks for growth in water, potash, and silver stocks.  Less liquid markets will sell off more quickly.  Policymakers will expropriate your wealth!  Dr. Berry showed his latest Discovery Investing scorecard and I noticed that some of the same companies were listed twice, both by their OTCBB ticker and TSX or TSXV ticker.  Hopefully he can develop a filter that will prevent double-counting companies, unless of course the scorecard allows for arbitraging the same ticker in different markets.  Dr. Berry's bottom line is that risk plays will help beat financial repression and taxation.  Good show, Doc!

Quinton Hennigh from Exploration Insights gave a terrific workshop on separating the wheat from chaff in junior gold deposits.  He mentioned that the DOW/gold ratio declines in tough times and heavy gold exploration coincides with that ratio's troughs.  Costs are stable when mining proliferates but drilling costs have escalated in the last 20 years (I disagree with this scenario, as we see heavy mining activity today but with rising costs from higher energy prices).  Digging deeper through more complex ore bodies drives up processing costs.  He said he likes royalty companies because they pay better than junior producers!  I think Louis "quality, man" James would like Quinton's investment criteria, so here they are.  Criteria 1:  Quinton likes juniors that find deposits a major would want to acquire.  Criteria 2:  Simple metallurgy suggests low processing costs.  Criteria 3:  Deposit veins are good when they good lateral and vertical continuity and are open in most directions.  Criteria 4:  Good deposits have uniformly high grades.  That's a good wish list, so anything that doesn't fit is an investment candidate to throw away IMHO.  Quinton also says juniors should avoid "chaff" veins.  These ephemeral veins display poor continuity and tend to be "shooty" (I guess like shoots on a tree branch).  Mineralogically complex veins have high processing costs.  Mine engineers on site exercise "grade control" by differentiating ore from waste as truckloads of rock exit a pit.  Too much waste means lost money.  Oxidized rock is cheaper to process, so seeing it at shallow depth is a good sign.  A high sulfidation gold system is bad because it is notoriously refractory and harder to process.  It should also go without saying that concentrated ore bodies that are closer to the surface are cheaper to extract than dispersed ore bodies deeper down.  Quinton's workshop answered a lot of the questions I had always pondered while staring at geological findings in company roadshow presentations.

The last key speaker I saw was Jay Taylor, another gold legend.  Jay noted that debt in the U.S. has grown faster than income, making us an insolvent nation.  M2 velocity is very low.  Speculative investment vehicles hurt first in contraction periods (LOL bye-bye stupid hedge funds!).  Jay is another guy who likes royalty companies and well-funded project generators!  Maybe I'm missing something here, but it seems like experts recognize value in business models that return the value of extracted resources to investors by way of dividends and royalties.  

Alrighty, it's time for the closing keynote panel moderated by Rick Rule.  He had to get in a jab at James Dines for his attractive models but they mostly behaved themselves this year.  Rick asked his panel how this year's election will matter.  They thought is eliminated the possibility that a new President would fire Ben Bernanke, thus continued QE.  James raised his usual ruckus about a coming calamity.  Rick asked what the equity market is indicating.  Some panelists said it portends a serious bear market and more poverty for Americans.  James (of course) didn't even answer the question except to mention tax loss selling and even obliquely predicted a new political party (where that came from, who knows).  Rick poked James by saying, "There's a couple of candidates in your booth that I'd vote for."  Rick asked if the bond bull bubble would continue.  One panelist thought that any reversal would mark the trade of the decade.  James (again the original) thought pension funds will disappoint people and that it's smarter to live off capital than negative yield (yes, folks, there's a difference and some part of that capital will at least pay a dividend).  Rick asked about monetary inflation and gold.  Someone said a comment I really liked:  "Gold is not an inflation hedge, it's a crisis/inflation hedge."  I suppose I should put the emphasis on crisis but I'll let my readers chew it over. Rick asked whether deflationary periods are bullish for gold.  One guy said that historically gold did better in real terms during deflation but we no longer have analogs for comparison because the world has used fiat currencies since the 1930s.  Here's where Jim Dines went off on a wild tangent about China pursuing resources in Africa.  I wish the guy would just give a straight answer once in a while, but when you're the senior mind in the precious metals analyst community I guess you have free reign.  That means I have something to look forward to in three decades.  Anyway, Rick's final question was about where the markets are in the junior resource cycle and whether anyone has a favorite subsector or stock.  One guy thinks we're in a tremendous buying opportunity thanks to short selling.  Jim likes REE stocks and said bullions are outperforming their respective stocks.  He  was a classic at the end, saying, "Whether you're rich or poor, it's good to have a lot of cash."  I should have mentioned that one of my life goals is to be on one of these panels someday.  I also should mention that the only real standout stock I noticed this year was Ucore, and I'll have more to say about it in a later article.  

My only pet peeve about the show is that the organizers change the name every couple of years.  It was the Gold Conference for a couple of decades, ending with the first year I attended in 2005.  Then it was the Resource Conference, then Hard Assets, and next year it will be the Metals and Minerals Conference.  These constant changes dilute the brand and lead to confusion for people who might be attracted to the resource sector but don't follow it regularly.  

I'll render a final observation on my incentive to keep attending.  James Dines deployed his local models once again but wouldn't allow me to have my picture taken with them.  Bummer.  I did notice that the investor relations dude hired by one of the junior miners kept hitting on those Dines Newsletter models.  I've seen this IR dude do this at other conferences and I wonder when he'll find the time to promote the company that hired him.  Argh, kids these days.  

Full disclosure:  No positions in companies mentioned unless specifically noted.  No consideration was offered, rendered, or accepted for any mention of any financial or information service mentioned.  Nothing in this article constitutes an endorsement of any product or service.  

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Alternative Energy Not Getting Any Second Wind

Another alternative energy company is giving up the ghost.  A123 has concluded that it can't profitably make lithium-ion batteries and is going into Chapter 11.  DOE should never have tried to pick winners but the temptation to look "green" is too strong to resist.  So where's all the green tech going to come from that's going to generate green jobs?  I guess it will have to come from green companies that don't need government help.

Some green sectors are addicted to government help.  Wind energy companies are scaling back in advance of the expiration of tax breaks for their sector.  Renewable energy seems to come and go in fads, and investors fall out of love with the sector when they realize how difficult it is to compete with hydrocarbons on cost.

Tonight's second presidential debate paid scant attention to renewable energy.  The rhetorical action centered on domestic production of oil, gas, and coal.  Both contenders had something to say about permits for drilling on federal land but little to say on what entrepreneurs needed to do to obtain permits.  One thing energy entrepreneurs can do is use the JOBS Act to raise capital.  Wildcatters who are serious about drilling can now crowdfund an equity raise for a project.

The energy story for America in the next few years will have little to do with the scant promise of green tech. That train left the station and went off the tracks before it could build up a full head of steam.  The promise of renewable sources has always been very selective.  Entrepreneurs can bid for the right to commercialize green tech developed in DOE labs.  The Southwest is full of acreage ripe for concentrated solar PV development.  Green approaches work when they're focused.

Thursday, October 04, 2012

Debating Shale Oil And Transport

There's plenty of room for disagreement over the widely divergent economic sources the two Presidential candidates cited in their debate last night.  What isn't debatable is something they both found agreeable:  U.S. shale oil production is strong and is reducing this country's dependence on imported oil.  The shale boom blessing may drive an unanticipated effect on the fortunes of some ocean carriers.  Demand for oil tankers to service U.S. imports will probably suffer.  The entire shipping industry has been on a newbuild frenzy since the Great Recession went into hiatus in 2009 but that affection for new hulls has been most visible in the containerized shipping sector.  Petroleum carriers will soon find out just how much an overcommitment to new hulls will cost them.

I've been tracking a couple of oil carriers off and on for about three years but I never went long their stocks.  If the whole sector suffers, the carriers with the least debt and fewest newbuild commitments may merit my investment.  If the renewed global recession (yes, it's here already) crashes crude oil prices, the weakest ocean carriers may look for acquirers.

Full disclosure:  No positions in the shipping sector at this time.  

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

New Zealand Energy Corp. (CVE:NZ) Is Producing

Let's check out New Zealand Energy Corp. (CVE:NZ or NZERF) today and see how well they're doing drilling for oil and gas in the land of kiwis.  The good news is that it's had positive net income for the last two quarters, and I'll admit that I'm impressed to see that from a junior resource company so soon after their IPO.  Most junior exploration companies struggle along with barren properties for years and do nothing but raise further capital that ends up in the pockets of senior management.  This one isn't like that.  They even had a massive pile of CAD$70M in cash as of March 31 to continue their exploration program.  Hallelujah.  


It's really nice to see a very experienced management team running this show.  Their CEO isn't a geologist but I can forgive that given the bench strength the entire team has in the resource sector.  It's worth noting that several of these executives also have relationships with Southern Arc Minerals (CVE:SA), which can be good if it adds to their industry knowledge or bad if it distracts them from NZERF.  


This junior carries much less risk than its peers of similar vintage because it is actually in production.  I think I'll keep this one on my radar, provided they keep producing.  


Full disclosure:  No position in CVE:NZ or CVE:SA at this time.  

Monday, July 02, 2012

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Eagleford Energy (EFRDF) Shouldn't Waste My Time

Hey, here's another so-called winner from one of Tim Fields' old Untapped Wealth mailers.  This one was about Eagleford Energy (EFRDF), an exploration company looking for oil in - you guessed it - Texas' Eagle Ford shale region.

Can you guess by now what their financial results have been like since 2009?  If you guessed anything other than negative net income, retained earnings, and free cash flow, you haven't been reading my critiques long enough.  I'm looking in SEC's EDGAR . . . was there even a 10-K published in 2010?!    Oh, wait, I found something that looks like a financial statement on a page about their annual meeting.  Check out the table on page 8 for the most important thing you need to know:  Net losses increased as revenue increased.  That means they can't control their variable operating costs.  The more they drill, the worse they'll perform.  I can't believe there's an analyst somewhere giving this a Buy rating but maybe some sell-siders really are desperate for attention.

The management team reads like a grab bag of dudes thrown together from some miscellaneous acquisitions.  I could probably find a couple of homeless people in San Francisco who could fill out any empty slots they have.  Eagleford can't afford my finder's fee.

The company touts its projects for being adjacent to the producing properties of larger competitors.  Folks, I've lived in San Francisco adjacent to multimillionaire neighborhoods for over seven years but that doesn't make me one.  Read phrases like "working to develop a number of potentially high volume oil targets" as really meaning "we haven't produced very much oil yet."  Wait, I take that back, they did hit something in June of this year but it's not clear how much.  That was their last press release for 2011.

I shouldn't even bother writing any more about this one.  Investors who bought the stock in late 2010 when I got this mailer paid well over a dollar for something now trading at twenty cents.  In a just world, Trinity Investment Research would have to explain its touts to investors after the fact.

Full disclosure:  No position in EFRDF, ever.

Friday, July 08, 2011

France Defeats Itself With Stupid Fracking Ban

Frenchies are hilarious.  Their banks bought billions of euros worth of worthless Greek debt and can't admit the massive losses they're about to take.  Meanwhile their government is very concerned about the mostly imaginary environmental hazards of fracking in oil exploration.  France's new ban on hydraulic fracturing ensures that Frenchies' energy needs will be held hostage to instability in Libya and elsewhere indefinitely.  This is just too darn bad.  The Paris Basin's geology resembles that of the U.S.'s oil-rich Bakken Formation and may hold very large amounts of shale oil.  Frenchies are handcuffing themselves by eliminating a very successful exploration method. 

The U.S. isn't that dumb (not yet anyway, although arguably we can give the rest of the world a run for its money in other categories of stupidity).  The Niobrara Formation has plenty of shale oil and natural gas.  Fracking is the only way to get at it.  Explorers are plenty busy in Wyoming to bring this trapped energy to you and me.  If I owned some shale-rich land I'd love to let wildcatters go fracking all over it in search of oil. 

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Natural Gas Lights The Way To North America's Future Export Dominance

Hold your horses there, Peak Oilers.  There's plenty of hydrocarbons to go around this here North American landmass.  Record volumes of natural gas are heading to market.  Hedge funds playing this trade will get killed as long as technology makes fields easy to crack open.  Oh yeah, BTW, the abundance of cheap gas makes it a compelling opportunity for export to energy-hungry emerging markets.  The high price of oil makes this stuff look good.  Americans need to quickly get over their NIMBY bias against LNG terminals if we want to make seruous money. 

Remember when the U.S. led the world in petroleum exploration before Saudi Arabia learned how to pump?  We can have that era of dominance again with natural gas, which means we can keep the dollar as the world's reserve currency if we don't have to recycle petrodollars into U.S. Treasuries. 

Find a good pipeline play that covers Eagle Ford and other gas-rich areas.  Then watch the cash roll in while the gas flows out.  It all sounds so easy until you try it. 

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

Possible Oil Price Spike Should Prompt Cheaper Transport

It just doesn't get any clearer than this. When Saudi Arabia's former oil minister says potential unrest in his country can lead to a serious oil supply shock, even casual observers should realize that the global economy is on thin ice.  Pursuing new hydrocarbon production can help mitigate supply shocks, and oil producers recognize the potential for unconventional oil sources to add to their proven reserves.  Note that healthy M&A activity in the oil sector now includes a big dose of unconventional resource plays. 

More production isn't the only way to keep the global economy on track.  More reliance on the most energy-efficient means of cargo transport - rail and barge movement - is in order.  Federal grants to improve passenger rail lines will likely have spillover benefits for freight rail.  The U.S. DOT has a plan to make America's waterborne "highways" strong enough to accommodate more container traffic.  These efforts are absolutely critical to keeping goods moving, since the trucking industry is unable to meet the current surge in demand for new trucks to carry freight. 

Speaking of demand for transportation, here's a related observation.  The most recent Cass Freight Index shows that monthly shipping activity rose 6.9% (13.8% yoy) while monthly freight payments rose by 6.3% (33.6% yoy).  Those yearly numbers are an alarming indication that the price of transportation is increasing faster than delivered volumes.  That's inflationary!  Rising fuel costs are undoubtedly a big factor in pushing rates up, and evidence is mounting that higher fuel costs are impacting service sector growth.  More focus on energy exploration and cheaper transportation can't come fast enough. 

Full disclosure:  Long TDW with covered calls.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

The Limerick of Finance for 02/27/11

Shale oil and gas are now in play
Large producers will show us the way
Drilling set to begin
May the lowest costs win
Hydrocarbons will light a new day