Showing posts with label Cairn India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cairn India. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2012

Looming embargo on Iran, Nigeria & few other bits

An EU ban on Iranian crude imports in response to the country’s continued nuclear programme is imminent but not immediate or so the City analysts and government sources would have you believe. Furthermore, news agency Bloomberg adds that the planned embargo is likely to be delayed by up to six months as European governments scramble to seek alternative sources.

The Japanese and Indian governments are also looking to reduce dependence on Iranian imports according to broadcasts from both countries while OPEC has indicated that it does not wish to be involved in row. Add the ongoing threats strike threats by Nigeria’s largest oil workers union, the Pengassan, as well the second largest, Nupeng, and political tension in the country to the Iranian situation and you don’t need the Oilholic to tell you that the short term risk premium is going mildly barmy.

It is nearly the end of the week and both benchmarks have rebounded with City analysts forecasting short term bullishness. With everyone scrambling for alternative sources, pressure is rising on already tight supply conditions notes Sucden Financial analyst Jack Pollard. “With the near-term geopolitical risk premium being priced in, Brent’s backwardation looks fairly assured as the front spreads continue to widen. Well-bid Italian and Spanish auctions have no doubt supported risk appetite, as the US dollar tracks back to lend upward pressure on commodities,” he adds.

When the Oilholic checked on Thursday, the Brent forward month futurex contract was resisting the US$110 per barrel level while WTI was resisting the US$99 level sandwiched between a bearish IEA report and geopolitical football. The next few weeks would surely be interesting.

Away from crude pricing, to a few corporate stories, ratings agency Moody’s has affirmed LSE-listed Indian natural resources company Vedanta Resources Plc's Corporate Family Rating of Ba1 but has lowered the Senior Unsecured Bond Rating to Ba3 from Ba2. The outlook on both ratings is maintained at negative following the completion of the acquisition of a controlling stake in Cairn India, on December 8, 2011.

Since announcing the move in August 2010, Vedanta has successfully negotiated the course of approvals, objections and amended production contract arrangements and now holds 38.5% of Cairn India directly, with a further 20% of the company held by Sesa Goa Ltd., Vedanta's 55.1%-owned subsidiary.

Moody’s believes the acquisition of Cairn India should considerably enhance Vedanta's EBITDA, but the agency is concerned with the sharply higher debt burden placed on the Parent company. In order to lift its stake from 28.5% to 58.5%, Vedanta drew US$2.78 billion from its pre-arranged acquisition facilities. Coupled with the issue of US$1.65 billion of bonds in June 2011, debt at the Parent company level is now in excess of US$9 billion on a pro forma basis. This compares with a reported Parent equity of US$1 billion at FYE March 2011.

Moving on, Venezuelan oil minister Rafael Ramírez said earlier this week that his country had decided to compensate ExxonMobil for up to US$250 million after President Hugo Chávez nationalised all resources in 2007. Earlier this month the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris, already stated that the country must pay Exxon Mobil a total of US$907 million, which after numerous reductions results in - well US$250 million.

Elsewhere, law firm Herbert Smith has been advising HSBC Bank Plc and HSBC Bank (Egypt) on a US$50 million financing for the IPR group of companies, to refinance existing facilities and to finance the ongoing development of IPR's petroleum assets in Egypt – one of a limited number of financings in the project finance space in Egypt since the revolution. It follows four other recent financings for oil and gas assets in Egypt on which Herbert Smith has advised namely – Sea Dragon Energy, Pico Petroleum, Perenco Petroleum and TransGlobe Energy.

On a closing note and sticking with law firms, McDermott Will & Emery has launched a new energy business blog – Energy Business Law – which according to a media communiqué will provide updates on energy law developments, and insights into the evolving regulatory, business, tax and legal issues affecting the US and international energy markets and how stakeholders might respond. The Oilholic applauds MWE for entering the energy blogosphere and hopes others in the legal community will follow suit to enliven the debate. Keep reading, keep it 'crude'!

© Gaurav Sharma 2012. Photo: Pipeline, South Asia © Cairn Energy.

Monday, December 05, 2011

An intensely ‘crude’ few days @WPC

In keeping with the intensity of World Petroleum Congresses of the past, the Oilholic’s first two days here have been – well – intense. The 20th WPC opened with customary aplomb on Dec 4th with an opening ceremony where feeding 5,000 delegates was a bit slow but the Qatari Philharmonic Orchestra tried its best to perk things up and make up for it.

When things began in earnest on Dec 5th – the Oilholic was spoiled for choice on what to and not to blog about and finding the time for it. Beginning with our hosts, in his inaugural address to Congress, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani, Emir of the State of Qatar highlighted that the event was being held in the Middle East for the first time; a wrong has been right – after all the region exports bulk of the world’s oil.

Welcoming and thanking aside, the Emir made a very important point about why cooperation here among crude importers and exporters is really necessary now more than ever.

“The growing needs for oil and gas requires enormous investments by the exporting countries. The financing of these investments and securing their profitability require the most accurate information possible about the factors affecting the global demand for oil & gas to reduce the degree of risk that these investments may be subjected to,” he said.

“It is not reasonable to ask the Exporting Countries to meet the future needs for these two commodities while at the same time the consumer countries carryout unilateral activities that augment the risks facing these investments,” the Emir concludes. Well said sir – consumers need to get their act together too.

Three of the biggest consumers are here in full force, i.e. the US, Indian and Chinese delegations; the size of latter’s delegation rivals even the Qatari participation. Completing the BRICs – Brazil and Russia are here seeking partners. Lukoil is looking to expand via investments while Rosneft is seeking a greater interaction with Norway’s Statoil. Brazilian behemoth Petrobras has been flagging its wares including details about the presence of oil at a prospection well (4-BRSA-994-RJS), located in Campos Basin, in the area known as Marlin Complex.

The well, commonly known as Tucura, lies between the production fields of Voador and Marlim, at a water depth of 523 meters. Located 98 km from the shore of Rio de Janeiro State, the well is 3km from Marlin's Field and 2.3 km from the P-20 platform. The discovery was confirmed by sampling in post-salt rock in a reservoir located at a water depth of 2,694 meters.

It follows Petrobras’ confirmation on Nov. 23 about the presence of a good quality oil in well (4-BRSA-1002-SPS), in south Santos Basin, in an area known as Tiro and Sidon. Petrobras CEO José Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo is busy outlining future plans and the company's activities in Brazil and in the world.

It seems the Brazilian major intends to invest US$225 billion between 2011 and 2015 with almost 60% of this going towards exploration and production projects.

Gabrielli highlighted Brazil as one of the largest and fastest growing markets in the world in terms of oil consumption. By way of comparison, Brazil's annual oil consumption in 2010 was up 2.1%, in contrast to a decline of 0.04% in OECD countries for the same period.

More later; keep reading, keep it crude!

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: 20th World Petroleum Congress Opening Ceremony & Dinner, Dec 4th, 2011 © Gaurav Sharma 2011.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Of Oil Tankers, China & the economic shift!

Oil will continue to power global economies in the main for decades  in the absence of a viable alternative taking off meaningfully, but have you given thought to how the crude stuff is moved globally. Odds-on bet would be that an oil tanker springs to mind - that bulky out of sight and out of mind metal behemoth crucial to the movement of oil around the globe. In a fascinating book - Oil on Water by Paul French and Sam Chambers, the reader gets an insight into the tanker transport aspect of the crude supply chain.

As the economic balance of power, most notably manufacturing, shifts to the East, so does traffic in shipping lanes in the general direction of the growing economies of Indian and China, the authors note. Joining their ranks is the age old developed world crude consumer - Japan, and regional oil exporters turned importers from Vietnam to Indonesia.

Club them all together, factor in China's dominance, bring out the empirical and anecdotal evidence, and the rise in South and East Asia's growing imports of the bulk of two trillion tons of black gold moving across global shipping lanes is becoming increasing visible. In this concise book of just over 200 pages, split by 10 chapters, French and Chambers begin by describing why the uninterrupted flow of oil is essential to globalisation and increasingly so as manufacturing and markets move Eastwards to Asia.

The book is part narrative, part reportage, part case study and part history. The authors switch seamlessly between describing their first hand experience on-board a crude carrying vessel, the history of the business and geopolitical concerns. Central to it all are the buzzwords of the modern day crude business - "energy security." It's what makes Indian and Chinese strategic planners wake up and smell the coffee, it's what American politicians are increasingly paranoid about and it's what some regimes bank on as a political tool.

China's cravings are growing by the year. Where and how these tankers are loaded, their modus operandi, security concerns, business hiccups and finally their centrality to the crude business it seems is only in the global subconscious. French and Chambers deserve to be applauded for raising the issue via this book. Both authors have gone one step further; they have raised issues of potential alarm from infrastructure to piracy, from environmental concerns to conflict which could disrupt a crucial traffic flow which we take for granted and seldom see firsthand.

A discussion on life without oil, the economic shift eastwards, piracy and pipeline politics are all there in this book and in some detail accompanied by facts and figures to substantiate the authors' case. It is one the best books the Oilholic has read on the subject and a must read for anyone interested in the energy business, geopolitics and movement of crude oil. It touches on a much ignored yet supremely crucial component of the movement of crude oil. Many make assumptions about it; few care to talk about it. Hence, the authors of this book have done us all a service.

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: Front Cover - Oil on Water © Zed Books

Monday, August 08, 2011

The Bears are back in Crude town!

It seems the Bears are back in Crude town and are hoping to lurk around for a little while yet. So this week begins like last week ended with the TV networks screaming how crude it all is. Well a look at either benchmark reveals a decline of above US$3 per barrel in Monday’s intraday trading alone and both benchmarks if observed over a seven-day period display a dip of 7% and above, more pronounced in the US given the “not so smart” political shenanigans related to the debt ceiling and S&P’s ratings downgrade of the country for the first time in its history.

The Oilholic cannot quite understand why some people are either shocked or displaying a sense of shock over the downgrade because the writing was on the wall for profligate America. As politicians on both sides were more interested in points scoring rather than sorting out the mess, what has unfolded is more sad than shocking. Given the US downgrade and contagion in the EU, short term trends are decidedly bearish for crude markets. However, if it goes beyond the average market scare and develops into a serious recessionary headwind then Brent could finally fall below US$100 per barrel and WTI below US$80.

Given the divergence in both benchmark levels, analysts these days offer different forecasts for both with increased vigour via a single note. For instance, the latest investment note from Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BoAML) sees Brent stabilising at US$80 and WTI at US$60 in the face of mild recessionary headwinds. However, the Oilholic agrees with their assertion there would be a Brent claw-back to prior levels as OPEC turns the taps off.

“In the US, we would see landlocked WTI crude oil prices stabilising at a much lower level, as OPEC supplies are of little relevance to the supply and demand balances for crude oil in the Midwest. With shale output still projected to increase substantially over the next few months, we believe that WTI crude oil prices could briefly drop to US$50/barrel under a recession scenario only to recover back up towards US$60/barrel as shale oil output is scaled back,” BoAML analysts noted further.

Over the short term, what looks bearish (at worst) or mixed (at best) for crude, is evidently bullish for precious metals where gold is the vanguard of the bubble. Does it make sense – no; is it to be expected – yes! Nevertheless, long term supply/demand permutations suggest an uptick in crude prices is more than likely by middle of 2012 if not sooner.

Moody's expects oil prices to remain high through 2012 which will support increasing capital spending by exploration and production (E&P) companies worldwide as they re-invest healthy cash flow streams. About 70% of capital spending will take place outside of North America, with Latin American companies including Brazilian operator Petrobras leading the way, according to a report published July-end.

Additionally, development activity in the 2010 Macondo oil spill-affected Gulf of Mexico – while building some momentum – is still hampered by a slow permit process, says the report.

However, Stuart Miller, vice president at Moody’s notes, "But the industry might approach the top of its cycle during the next year as shorter contracts and lower day rates change the supply/demand balance."

Understandably, high risk, high reward modus operandi of the E&P business will remain more attractive as opposed to the refining and marketing (R&M) end of the crude business as the only way is up given when it comes to long term demand. Even the non demand-driven oil upsides (for example – as seen from Q2 2002 to Q2 2003 and Q3 2007 to Q3 2008) were a shot in the arm of E&P elements of the energy business (as well as paper traders).

Moving on to other chatter, Mercer’s cost of living survey found Luanda, the capital of Angola as the world's most expensive city for expatriates. It topped the survey for the second successive year, followed by Tokyo in Japan and N'Djamena in Chad. New to the top 10 were Singapore, ranked eighth, and Sao Paulo in Brazil, which jumped from 21st to 10th. The Oilholic sees a hint of crudeness in there somewhere.

Meanwhile, the National Iranian Oil Company, which does not get to flex its muscles very often in wake of international sanctions, got to do so last week at the expense of crude-hungry India. The burgeoning Indian economy needs the oil but US sanctions on Iran make it difficult to send international bank payments.

As a result Indian companies have been looking for alternative ways to make payments to Iran after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) halted a clearing mechanism at the end Q4 2010. In the interim, the cash-strapped oil rich Iranians threw a strop threatening to cut off supplies to India if payments were not made by August 1, 2011.

However, it now emerges that at the eleventh hour both sides agreed to settle the bill as soon as possible. Well when 400,000 barrels per day or 12% of your crude count is at stake – you have to find novel ways to make payments. The “first” part of the outstanding bill we are told would be paid within a few days.

Crudely sticking with India, that same week, the Indian government finally gave a formal “conditional” approval to LSE-listed mining group Vedanta Resources for its takeover of Cairn Energy's India unit. However, approval came with a condition that Cairn India and India's state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) share the royalty payment burden of crude production from their Rajasthan fields.

ONGC owns a 30% stake in the block but pays royalties on 100% of the output under a "royalty holiday" scheme dating from the 1990s aimed at promoting private oil exploration.

The sale, held in impasse since August, has been hit by difficulties resulting from differences between Cairn India and ONGC over the royalties issue. Vedanta (so far) has a 28.5% stake in Cairn India. It wants the government to approve the buyout of another 30% stake in Cairn India from Cairn Energy. Cairn Energy currently owns a 52% stake in Cairn India. Given the government’s greenlight, it should all be settled in a matter of months.

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: Veneco Oil Platform, California © Rich Reid, National Geographic