Brian Bagnell,
CFA, is a research analyst in Canadian oil and gas company analysis for
Macquarie Capital Markets in Calgary. He was formerly an investment
associate at the NB Investment Management Corp. He holds a bachelor's
degree in business administration (finance and accounting) from the
University of New Brunswick.
The Energy Report:
Oil prices have made a minor recovery, with West Texas Intermediate
(WTI) at about $50/barrel ($50/bbl) and Brent at about $60/bbl. Where
are oil prices going in the short term?
Brian Bagnell:
That's a hard question to answer. What we know for certain is that
prices will remain volatile throughout H1/15. The numbers bear this out,
with the global supply/demand overbalance predicted to come in around
1.5 million barrels per day (1.5 MMbbl/d) in Q1/15 and 1.9 MMbbl/d in
Q2/15.
TER: The U.S. oil rig count reached a five-year low earlier this month. How long before U.S. oil production shows a significant decline?
TER: When U.S. production declines, will we see a price spike?
BB:
No. I don't think we'll be back to $70/bbl anytime soon. The forward
curve for WTI—what we call the strip—suggests we will hit $60–61/bbl by
the end of this year. That seems reasonable to me.
TER: Do you believe in peak oil?
BB:
No, I don't. Higher prices tend to spur innovation. We once thought
that peak oil existed, but that was before we discovered horizontal
drilling and multistage fracturing, etc., and those technologies still
have not been applied to shale reservoirs worldwide. Potentially, a lot
of untapped resource in the world still can be accessed through newer
technology and improved efficiency. It is possible we could see peak
demand before peak supply.
TER: Many oil majors
and the banks that lend them money have taken tremendous hits with the
collapse in the oil price. Does this suggest that loans will not be
available for expansion of shale oil drilling in the near future?
BB:
Most bank lines are tied to reserve growth. What we've seen this year,
so far, are year-over-year reserve increases. And the banks have tended
to use price decks in the $65/bbl or higher range, which is obviously
much higher than the current strip. This suggests they are still willing
to increase credit lines, even in this environment.
TER: What conditions would lead to oil prices once again topping $100/bbl?
"Oil prices will remain volatile through H1/15."
BB:
In the next couple of years, I can imagine only two. The first would be
a geopolitical event, such as a Nigerian civil war or even greater
turmoil in Libya and Syria. The second would be a decision by member
nations of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
to break ranks and act unilaterally to decrease production.
TER: Would open Russian military involvement in Ukraine count as one of those geopolitical events?
BB:
Probably not. Ukraine is more of a gas-producing country than an
oil-producing country. Armed retaliation against Russia from outside
could cause prices to spike, but I highly doubt oil prices would reach
$100/bbl.
TER: Since September, the price of
natural gas has fallen from above $4.20 per million British thermal
units ($4.20/MMBtu) to below $2.80/MMBtu. How badly has this drop hurt
producers and explorers?
BB: It's had a
tremendous impact. In this gas price environment, the key to survival is
to have the lowest possible cost structure. We have seen some Canadian
producers with low cost structures demonstrate pretty resilient share
prices, even though gas prices are near five-year lows. There is a lot
of gas out there, and only the most productive wells and efficient
companies will continue to make a profit.
TER: In the current cycle, how important is cash flow for oil and gas juniors?
BB:
Cash flow is always king—the foremost consideration for all oil and gas
companies in any commodity price cycle. It's more important now than
ever. Cash flow is the top metric we examine, so long as the
company looks solvent. And it is of even greater importance to the
juniors, as they don't tend to have as much access to capital as larger
companies.
TER: What's your favorite Western Canadian junior gas producer?
BB: Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. (AAV:TSX; AAV:NYSE).
This company was a very different entity a year ago, when it was
consolidated uneasily with a company called Longview Oil Corp. Advantage
has since sold Longview to Surge Energy Inc. (SGY:TSX), and has become a pure-play Montney producer with a large, contiguous land base in the Glacier region of western Alberta.
This
company is trading at a discounted multiple compared to the rest of its
peer group. It has a very solid balance sheet, and a decent amount of
production growth coming in 2015, most of which has already been paid
for and drilled. On a combined basis, cash costs have averaged between
$6–7/barrel of oil equivalent ($6–7/boe) over the last couple of
quarters, which puts Advantage in the conversation about lowest cash
costs in western Canada. In a poor natural gas environment, all this
looks very attractive.
TER: Advantage shares are up significantly recently.
BB: The whole market has been up. Several Canadian small- and mid-cap companies are up similar amounts in the last few weeks. DeeThree Exploration Ltd. (DTX:TSX.V)
comes to mind. But from my discussions with institutional investors,
there is not a lot of attention being paid to Advantage as compared to
some of its higher profile peers, such as Peyto Exploration and Development Corp. (PEY:TSX; PEYUF:OTC) and Tourmaline Oil Corp. (TOU:TSX).
Canadian Gas-Weighted Peer Valuations
Courtesy Brian Bagnell, Macquarie Capital Markets
TER:
Advantage has announced its intention to spend $735 million ($735M) in
capital expenditures (capex) over the next three years. What do you make
of that?
BB: That has been the company's plan
for quite a while. And Advantage has been executing according to that
plan, framed within the prevailing commodity prices environment of the
last couple of years. The company recently reduced its three-year capex
forecast to $545M; it was able to do so because of higher productivity
and lower than expected declines from its 2013 Montney wells. Not a
single one of its 33 wells drilled in 2014 has yet been tied in, which
means the company can cut back on its spending and still hit its
three-year growth targets. We like that Advantage has a measured,
achievable pace of growth that it can finance internally; in my opinion,
the market isn't paying for big growth numbers anyway, like it was in
mid-2014. Companies are being rewarded more now for having sustainable
balance sheets.
TER: How big a producer could Advantage become?
BB:
Quite large, if it were to continue to fulfill the $735M plan.
Certainly, the company could close to double its current production.
Producing up to 50 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day (50
Mboe/d) is not out of the question.
TER: Which new Alberta oil junior do you like?
BB: We recently initiated coverage on Toro Oil & Gas Ltd. (TOO:TSX.V),
the newest western Canadian junior to be publicly listed. It is focused
in the Alberta Viking play in the Provost-Halkirk region. It acquired
its main asset from Zargon Oil & Gas Ltd. (ZAR:TSX) in November.
There
are a few interesting things about this company. The management has had
past success. President and CEO Barry Olson was formerly CEO of Orleans
Energy Ltd., which discovered the Ante Creek Montney pool and then
merged with RMP Energy Inc. (RMP:TSX)
in 2011. RMP has gone on to be very successful, with one of the most
attractive assets in western Canada. Toro is focused on high netback
Viking oil. Of course, netbacks for all oil plays in the current
environment are challenged, to say the least, but the Viking is one of
the plays we think will recover the soonest.
TER: How does Toro stand for cash?
BB: It
has $12M cash on its balance sheet, which is a boast very few Canadian
junior oil and gas companies can make today. Most have some form of bank
debt, and that is hurting them in this environment. Toro, with its
access to a $25M credit line, is in a position of strength.
TER: How does Toro's resource base compare to those of its peers?
BB: We
have compared it to Beaumont Energy Inc., a private oil and gas Viking
producer in Saskatchewan. Beaumont acquired a similar-size pool in late
2012, began horizontal drilling on it right away, and was able to grow
production from 1,000 barrels per day (1 Mbbl/d) to between 5–6 Mbbl/d
in about two years. Toro's oil pool is very similar to Beaumont's, and
it has seen very little horizontal development to date. With proper
application and drilling techniques Toro should be able to enjoy a
success similar to Beaumont's. That is certainly not being priced into
the stock today.
Toro Oil & Gas Case Study: Beaumont Energy
Courtesy Brian Bagnell, Macquarie Capital Markets
TER:
You initiated coverage of Toro on Jan. 30 with a 12-month target price
of $1.50/share. Shares are currently trading at about $0.68. That would
be a 124% increase.
BB: Yes. But that puts the
stock at only a median multiple. The target price is based on a multiple
derived from the average of all the Canadian small- and mid-cap
companies we have under coverage today.
TER: Can you discuss a natural gas junior you recently assumed coverage on?
BB: Storm Resources Ltd. (SRX:TSX.V)
is another company doing great things in the Montney. Its main asset is
in the Umbach region of British Columbia. It has increased its type
curve every year, all while showing pretty significant production growth
from its Montney wells. The company is reasonably valued and has a very
conservative management team, which I like a lot. I like a team that
doesn't grow just for the sake of growth.
TER: How does Storm's balance sheet look?
BB:
We quote based on current forward pricing, which we update every week
because we don't think the market is paying us for our commodity price
forecasts. We think investors want to know where a company is trading on
market-implied pricing. On that pricing, we see Storm staying below
1.8x debt:cash-flow through 2015, which is in the top tier of peers. We
have Storm trading at around 9x 2015 enterprise value:debt-adjusted cash
flow, which is about the median multiple of the gas-weighted group in
Canada. It ranks among the highest of the gas-weighted group on current
forward pricing in terms of production/share growth and cash flow/share
growth.
TER: What are the company's prospects for growth?
BB: We
like that Storm doesn't give itself credit for much outside its core
Umbach region, even though it appears the company has a lot of resource
potential there and also, potentially, in the lower layers of the
Montney. Storm's share price has been on a roll in the last month, and
we think it's trading at a very reasonable valuation today.
TER: Can you name another Alberta junior that's not growing solely for the sake of growth?
BB: Manitok Energy Inc. (MEI:TSX)
has decided to suspend drilling at its Entice and Stolberg properties
and apply 80% of its cash flow to debt reduction in H1/15. This is a
prudent move. This is survival of the fittest, and maintaining a
flexible balance sheet so that you can come out on the other side when
commodity prices improve is crucial.
This company has had some
good wells out of Entice, and some not-so-good wells. We think Manitok
has a lot of potential in some of the formations on that property, but
today, most of those wells are likely not economic. It makes more sense
to wait the downturn out.
TER: Manitok has hedged
70% of 2015 oil production at $93.67/bbl WTI, and its 2015 natural gas
is hedged at $3.47/MMBtu. Is this prescient or commonplace?
BB:
It's quite uncommon, actually. It is at the very high end of the entire
Canadian small- and mid-cap space for hedging—probably the entire oil
and gas universe. A lot of what Manitok has for hedges are in the form
of puts. That's a way to protect the downside without locking in your
upside. Hindsight is always 20/20, but right now, what Manitok has done
with hedging looks absolutely fantastic.
"There is a lot of gas out there, and only the most productive wells and efficient companies will continue to make a profit."
I
am personally a fan of hedging, and I think any company with a big
growth component in its platform should hedge a considerable part of its
production. This mitigates commodity price environments like today's,
when unhedged companies are forced to shelve rigs and abandon growth.
Manitok is in good shape because of its prudence, and yet it is trading
very cheaply versus its peers.
TER: Let's talk an oil and gas junior outside North America you follow.
BB: Serinus Energy (SEN:TSX)
has operations in eastern Ukraine, Tunisia and Romania. Obviously, with
all the strife in eastern Ukraine right now, it's having a tough time.
While the troubles haven't affected its drilling operations, the
government in Kiev has imposed policies that make it difficult for this
company. For instance, capital controls have been instituted, and now it
is essentially illegal for cash to be sent out of the country. Serinus
gets most of its cash flow from its Ukrainian operations.
TER: Serinus' Ukrainian operations are in the Donbass, the region that has demonstrated support for Russia, correct?
BB: Yes, but its operations are north of the areas that have seen the most fighting.
TER: What's your opinion of Serinus' operations in Romania and Tunisia?
BB:
Its Moftinu project in Romania is very early stage. Both its wells
discovered multiple hydrocarbon-bearing zones, and the company is moving
forward with completion and testing in mid-March. It's really too early
to call, but it looks to be a very interesting prospect.
Serinus'
Sabria concession in Tunisia is more advanced. Its first horizontal
well there started producing at a rate of 635 boe/d and grew to 1 Mboe/d
after cleanup, an excellent result that warrants further exploration
and development drilling.
TER: To close, can you describe a good 2015 strategy for oil and gas investors?
BB:
Again, this space will be characterized by extreme volatility, so it
will not be for the faint of heart in the short term. Many Canadian
companies are implying WTI prices of $70/bbl or higher, which means that
they've already priced in a large chunk of the pending recovery.
TER: Is this perhaps a good environment for bargain hunters?
BB:
There are some bargains to be found within the Canadian energy space.
Some examples would be Advantage Oil and Gas, DeeThree Exploration and
RMP Energy. All three are still trading at discounted valuations and
could have potential for a catch-up trade.
TER: Brian, thank you for your time and insights.
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DISCLOSURE:
1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Manitok Energy Inc. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Brian Bagnell: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 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: Manitok Energy Inc., Toro Oil & Gas Ltd., DeeThree Exploration Ltd., RMP Energy. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. 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. Oil and stock prices were current as of the date of publication.
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( Companies Mentioned: AAV:TSX; AAV:NYSE, MEI:TSX, RMP:TSX, SEN:TSX, SRX:TSX.V, TOO:TSX.V, )
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