Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Tioga Paper Supplement: Celebrating Oil Day

Download and enjoy. A supplement to the Tioga Tribune to celebrate Annual Oil Day in Tioga.

Even seasoned investors can learn a few new things in what looks simply like an advertising supplement. for example:

Page 6, under the photo: Enbridge is working on plans to further double the company's pipeline export capacity in North Dakota. Since the news had not been announced, the spokesman couldn't elaborate on the projects, except to say that the projects, once completed, would further double Enbridge's export capacity in North Dakota. While she couldn't get into specifics, she hinted that expansion activity could center around the Beaver Lodge Station south of Tioga, North Dakota (USA).

Page 8: huge story on Continental Resources, which I think is the "LA Lakers" of the oil industry in North Dakota.  That would make Harold Hamm the "Phil Jackson" of the operators in the Bakken. The article notes that CLR has 21 rigs operating in North Dakota, which is the most of any operator in the state.  (The article was based on an interview with Jeff Hume; see comments below; I referenced "Harold Hamm" in the original post; I have since corrected those references to Jeff Hume per the author of the original article.)
  • Jeff Hume noted that the Nesson Anticline is the backbone of the Bakken.
  • CLR currently has three rigs drilling Eco-Pads, and will have six rigs drilling on Eco-Pads by the fourth quarter of this year, with two or three of them in the Tioga area.
  • A reminder that CLR increased CAPEX for 2010 to $1.3 billion; and expanded its bank credit faciltiy to a maximum of $2.5 billion. "However, the increased bank financing might be seen as a temporary measure."
  • CLR is exploring ways to continue funding operations (interesting).
  • CLR now has over 800,000 net acres in the Bakken.
  • Jeff Hume expects to be in the Tioga area for the next 15 - 20 years. 
Page 9: Hess is currently producing about 14,000 barrels of oil/day in the Bakken, and plans to bost that to 80,000 in the next five years. Hess has a $4 billion annual CAPEX program (compare to CLR above).
  • Hess noted that production generates a profit margin of 10 percent with a West Texas intermediate crude price of $40. (That explains an earlier cryptic/vague comment by a Hess spokesman. This is the most precise information I've seen Hess provide.)
  • And if seasoned investors had not heard of Hess's Paris Basin play in France until now, they can credit the Tioga Tribune supplement.
Page 11: Full page on article detailing the risk to the Bakken-- federal regulation. Bottom line: "The Bakken is dead if they stop fracking." Downright scary. I think the writing is on the wall. For investors, the price of oil would certainly trend higher -- but natural gas would probably double or triple overnight -- the US is swimming in natural gas but only because of fracking. So, the more production these companies have on line before fracking is halted, the better prepared they are for any contingency. I think that's one of the biggest drivers for companies to expedite their drilling programs. Get the wells drilled; move elsewhere for two to three years while the federal frac rules are implemented (unless Feds allow fracking to continue while new rules are implemented); and then move back in when rules in place. (Some of this is my personal opinion; some of this has been shared by experts in the field.)

1 comment:

  1. Hi Bruce, thanks for linking to our little advertising supplement:)

    A minor correction if I may: The ContRes story is based on an interview I had with Jeff Hume. We'll do Hamm next time, hopefully.

    ReplyDelete