I’m going to go over a profile of one of the largest E&P
companies by production, if not by market capitalization. I own this company because of its very low
valuation, not because of their great execution. As I’ve said before, I have a temperamental
predisposition to invest in companies with low valuations. Their execution has been marginal at best
over the past few years, especially considering the large opportunity set
before them.
Apache describes themselves:
“Over the years our strategy for achieving profitable
growth has evolved. Over the most recent decade Apache has been an active
acquirer of properties, following up each one with proactive exploitation
operations, including workovers, re-completions, and drilling, to increase
production and reserves, as well as efforts to reduce costs per unit produced
and enhance profitability.”- 2005 10k
filing
Apache has been a significant independent company since long
before the shale boom days. They would
acquire elderly fields and invest in stimulating further production.
At any given time, oil companies must be either producing
free cash flow and return capital to shareholders, or growing production. Doing both at once is preferred, but rare. If they can’t do at least one of these, then
something is going very wrong. Apache
has tended to err on the side of growth, with minimal FCF although they are
currently upping their share buyback program, an uncommon strategy among
E&Ps currently. Until the past few
years they have managed to grow production buy an impressive 12% CAGR. Unfortunately this streak has pretty much
ended in the three years since 2011.
I’ve heard people say
(and Apache themselves say) that they are good at taking on the mature fields
that the oil majors turn away from. I do
think that this is partly true. I also
think it was partly a difference in philosophy between them and the oil
majors. Because the oil companies had
tended to grossly underestimate the long term price of oil, which steadily rose
throughout the past two decades, they tended to err on the side of returning
capital rather than growing production. In
other words if Shell would only invest on a project that met whatever their
threshold internal rate of return, which was based on a too-low estimate for
the price of oil, they would tend to divest mature properties, when in
retrospect it would have been better to invest in them.
The oil majors would also tend to underestimate their cost
for new projects, especially the larger and more technically complex ones. By way of example, look at the Shell
gas-to-liquids plant in Qatar begun in 2003.
This plant takes gas and converts it to liquid petroleum using the
Fischer-Tropsch process, the same way Nazi Germany produced gasoline from coal
during WW2. The cost was originally
supposed to be $5b, and the original cost model suggested it would be
sufficiently profitable at $40 long term oil price. Well the cost turned out to be $24b when it
was all said and done, but they were partly saved by the fact that Brent has
now been trading above $100 for years.
This is an egregious example but it is representative of a wider trend
for projects by the oil majors. They go
way over budget, but luckily the price of oil turned out to stay higher than
was originally projected, salvaging the economics of the projects. But if oil companies had spent that cash on
less glamorous projects like stimulating mature oil fields to coax out a few
extra barrels (Apache’s strategy) they would have tended achieve better returns
than the complex mega projects that have reliably run behind schedule and over
budget.
So I’m not really sure if Apache’s long term success has
been due to their unique expertise, or because they were able to gobble up
small assets that the oil majors shed because they incorrectly assumed the
price of oil would be lower than it turned out to be over the longer term.
An example that
Apache likes to tout as their strength is Permian Basin field they bought from
Amoco (now BP) in 1991. The production curve from the time of purchase is shown below. They bought a
field in decline, and made it decline less fast.
But this chart doesn’t show the extra capex that they
invested to achieve this. Was their
technical ability the source of this success, or was it simply their more
optimistic (and correct) view of the long term price of oil? It is a difficult question, but it is the
type of question that makes investing in this sector so interesting.
More recently, Apache has stalled. They have produced basically no free cash
flow over the past few years, but this is typical of E&Ps right now in this
time of production growth.
Unfortunately, Apache has managed to spend all their cash flow while
growing production by only ~3% annually since 2011. This is an unimpressive record considering
the very high price of oil during this period.
In the next installment I’ll talk a bit more about why they’ve done
poorly recently and why I own them.
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