I wanted to check in on the valuations of these companies to see if there are any readjustments I need to do. I'm still holding about 57% of the E&P portfolio in WLL, 24% in CHK, and 18% in APA. There was no buying and selling over the period.
Overall I was able to outperform the market over the three
month period from when we last checked in.
The majority of the out-performance is attributable to Whiting Petroleum,
the largest position. The Bakken in
general was by far the best performing group, driven considerably by the WLL/KOG
merger announcement. Gas levered
companies did badly, including all of the Marcellus companies and the two most
gas-weighted diversified E&Ps, SWN and CHK.
CHK was my real loser over the period. Note that the stock price for CHK is adjusted to
include the current market value of the Seventy Seven Energy shares that were
distributed to CHK shareholders in a spin out.
I also updated my valuation spreadsheet by checking into the
net debt, sharecount and 12 month trailing EBITDA for each of the companies on
Yahoo finance.
Despite the sell-off the Marcellus names remain very
expensive. Among the Marcellus names,
RRC and COG are really the premier companies in my opinion, but I’m still
content to sit on the sidelines for now even after they lost 15% over the last quarter. Its still a bit of a mystery to me how these companies should be valued. They have the lowest cost of production for any sort of energy in North America, but they are also constrained from exporting it, and there is so much damn gas that its hard to see prices rising much.
The Permian companies managed to outperform the market and
the sector in general. And the
valuations just seem totally crazy to me.
Pioneer is a $34b enterprise value with trailing EBITDA of less than
$2b. This is just far to rich. EOG is a much better company with better
growth, better drilling prospects, and a history of terrific execution, and trades
at 8.5x trailing EBITDA. And that is
after going up 20% in the last quarter.
I just don’t see how these Permian Basin companies can command the
valuations that they’re trading at.
To me the real opportunities are in the diversified
companies. It does not make sense that
Apache, which has operations in the Permian basin that rival both CXO and PXD
in size should trade at ¼ their valuation.
It does not make sense that MRO (Marathon) should trade at such a small fraction
of the Bakken producers either. Marathon
puts about 60% of their capital into the Bakken + Eagleford + Anadarko basin so why do they trade now where near the valuation of pure play companies?
Within the Bakken, Whiting remains a good value in my
opinion, and I have not sold any shares despite the run they’ve had. Whiting, after the Kodiak acquisition, will
be similar in size to Continental, but again there is a large valuation
gap. As of today, the valuation is about
70% higher for Continental on a trailing EV/EBITDA basis. If Whiting starts to trade up into the 9x
EBITDA range I may take some profits, but I’m comfortable with the valuation
because I think that Whiting’s capital efficiency is likely to continue to show
improvement.
New valuation spreadsheet notes shown below. this is probably pretty boring, but I included my notes from this exercise. I was comparing sharecount, net debt, and 12 month trailing EBITDA since last check in April.
Diversified:
EOG- Sharecount climbed
by a few hundred thousand since January, presumably due to executive options. Net debt shrank from 4.5b to 4.24b.
APA- Sharecount was down to 385.7 from 395mm, or about
3%. Net debt climbed a bit from 7.5b to
7.87b.
APC- Debt shrank from 10.5b to 8.5b (there must have been
asset sales here). Sharecount crept up a
bit.
HES- debt went
from 3.76b to 4.29b. Sharecount
decreased by 4mm to 318.1
OXY-Debt went
from 2.9 to 4.750b Sharecount decreased by 10mm to 785.61mm
MRO- Debt decreased
from 6.5b to 4.5b (overseas asset sales?).
Sharecount decreased by 20mm to 676.06.
A 3% decrease in sharecount over 6 months is pretty impressive,
especially while also reducing debt.
They also pay a 2% dividend.
Maybe I should be looking more closely at MRO?
DVN-Debt increased MASSIVELY to 13.49b from only about
6b. What did they buy?? Sharecount crept up a fraction, fairly
stable.
CHK- Debt dropped DRAMATICALLY to 13.03 b, down about 4.6b
from earlier. A big chunk of this is
probably from the CHK midstream spinout (Seventy Seven Energy). Sharecount stable, declining slightly.
NBL-Debt up by 200mm to 3920mm. Sharecount is perfectly unchanged.
SWN- 4b cash surplus
to a 1.8b net debt? What did they buy?
MUR- Net debt increased by 400mm to 2.430b. ~2% decrease in sharecount.
PERMIAN
CXO- Minimal increase in net debt by 100mm to 3.77b. Sharecount creeps up by .2%
PXD- Increase in net debt by 200mm to 2.45b (still quite
low.)
LPI- Net debt up by $80m to 960mm
XEC- net debt
increased by 200mm to 1.020b.
EGN- Net Debt stable, sharecount stable.
BAKKEN COMPANIES
WLL- Net debt increased by 700mm to 2.24b. No change in sharecount at all. Valuation is now looking a bit more full at
almost 7x ebitda on a trailing basis. Despite the big increase in price, this
still looks like the best Bakken company to own from a valuation perspective.
CLR-Net debt up by about $1b to 5.020 b. They are spending money like its 2011.
KOG- Net debt stable
at 2.24b. At 3.5x net debt/ebitda, they
were constrained from borrowing more.
OAS: net debt up by ~300mm to 2.20. They are also running at 3x net debt/ebitda.
NOG: NET debt increases from 527mm to 900mm. Sharecount is stable. Their EBITDA must have increased too though.
Marcellus:
RRC: net debt inched
upward to 2.23b. Sharecount is stable,
but I know they authorized more share issues.
It must not have happened yet.
EQT: Net Debt creeping up to 1.70b from 1.4b. Sharecount up by about 4m to 151mm. That is a disconcertingly large amount of
issuance for options incentives.
COG: Net debt stable at 1.19b. Sharecount up by about 1mm to 417.
UPL: debt down from 3.8b to 2.4b. They are now trading at just 7.4x trailing
EBITDA? Could they be a takeover target
for someone like SWN? The share price is
about where it was when the original valuation was made, but it has been a bit
of a wild ride indeed.
AR: Debt up by 700mm to 2620mm. Sharecount stable. Debt is going to have to go up a lot more
too, because they have to drill like crazy to grow into their $18b
valuation. 32x trailing EBITDA! I’m skeptical about a company going so big
like this. I’d be interested to learn
more about Antero, but my initial instinct is don’t touch these guys with a
10ft pole. They are like Range, but less
well established. And in the
Marcellus/Utica, you have to have scale to be able to get the take-away
capacity.
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