Showing posts with label Statoil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Statoil. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

UK PM flags up crude credentials

The Oilholic attended the British lobby group CBI’s annual conference earlier today listening to UK Prime Minister David Cameron flag-up his crude credentials (admittedly among other matters). The PM feels investment in the Oil & Gas sector and British expertise in it could be part of his wider economic rebalancing act.

“In last few weeks alone I have visited an £4.5 billion new investment from BP in the North Sea…And today I hosted Britain and Norway signing a 10-year deal to secure gas supplies and develop together over £1 billion of Norwegian gas fields,” he said.

That deal of course was part of British utility Centrica’s 10-year agreement worth £13 billion to buy natural gas from Norway's Statoil and jointly develop fields.

"Gas plays a central role in powering our economy, and will continue to do so for decades to come. Today's agreement will help to ensure the continued security and competitiveness of gas supplies to Britain, from a trusted and reliable neighbour," the PM concluded.

Admittedly, from a gasoline consumers’ standpoint successive British governments have long lost street cred when it comes to taxing fuel a long while ago; still the present lot fare better in relative terms if the UK ONS is to be relied upon. The British statistics body announced last week that the Government’s Share of petrol pump price dropped to 66p in the pound in 2009/10; from nearly 81p in 2001/02.

The data also show that the poorest 20% of UK households paid almost twice as much of their income in duties on fuel than the richest 20%. In 2009/10, the poorest 20% of households paid 3.5% of their disposable income on duty, compared with only 1.8% for the top 20%. Overall, the average UK household spent 2.3% of its disposable income on duties on fuel.

However, in cash terms, the richest 20% of households paid almost three-times the amount paid by the bottom 20%. In 2009/10 the richest 20% of households spent £1,062 on petrol taxes, compared with £365 for the poorest 20% of households. Overall, the average UK household spent £677 on duties on fuel in 2009/10.

Finally, the UK, US and Canada announced new sanctions against Iran following growing concern over its nuclear programme in wake of the IAEA report. In a statement the US government said that Iran's petrochemical, oil and gas industry (including supply of technical components for Upstream and downstream ops) and its financial sector would be targeted by the sanctions.

Canada will ban all exports for the petrochemical, oil and gas industries without exceptions while the British government would demand that all UK credit and financial institutions had to cease trading with Iran's banks from Monday afternoon. The Oilholic notes that this is first time the UK has cut off a petro-exporting country’s banking sector, in fact any country’s banking sector in this fashion. Its highly doubtful if the move will tame misplaced Iranian belligerence.

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: British Prime Minister David Cameron speaking at the CBI Conference, November 21st, 2011 © Gaurav Sharma 2011.

Monday, October 24, 2011

North Sea, Gaddafi, CFTC (Rhymes not intended)

The past week has been cruder than ever, loads to talk about – not least a bit of good news from the North Sea for a change. Following BP’s earlier announcement on its commitment to offshore west of the Shetland Islands to the tune of £4.5 billion, Statoil recently doubled the estimate of the size of its crude find in the North Sea.

The Norwegian energy major now says the Aldous Major South field, a prospection zone linked to the Avaldsnes field operated by Swedish firm Lundin Petroleum, could contain between 900 million and 1.5 billion barrels of recoverable oil.

While the find is perhaps one of the largest ever discoveries in the North Sea, what is of much more significance is the fact that much of extraction zone is in relatively shallower waters. Admittedly, the find and BP’s move are unlikely to increase British production levels to pre-peak (1999) levels. Nonetheless it is welcome news for a prospection zone, the British end of which has been bemoaning higher taxation and where the only overall bonanza independent observers sometimes see is the one related to decommissioning. (Not that, that’s over.)

From the North Sea to Col. Moammar Gaddafi – whose gory end had a near negligible impact on crude oil futures according to evaluations conducted by several City analysts. The former Libyan dictator was killed by revolutionary forces in his hometown of Sirte last Thursday. Most analysts felt focus had already shifted, following the fall of Tripoli, to restoring Libyan production. In fact damaged oil terminals, already factored in to the pricing strategy and supply/demand permutations, were more of a concern than the Colonel’s demise. As Libya moves forward, what sort of government takes shape remains to be seen.

Continuing with pricing, the ICE Brent forward month futures contract could not hold on to early gains last week and stayed below the US$110 level, but the WTI had a mini rally ending the week above US$87. Today in intraday trading Brent’s flirtation with the US$110 level and WTI’s with US$88 continues with all eyes on the outcome of the EU leaders’ summit on October 26th.

Analysts at Sucden Financial Research, expect some further consolidation in the oil market ahead of the meeting. “Thus, volume might be muted while high volatility and nervous trading are possible to dominate the markets. In the meantime, currencies movements will remain the key driver of oil direction, while it will be interesting to watch how the global equity markets will digest any breaking news,” they wrote in an investment note.

Moving away from pricing but on a related note, the Oilholic found time this weekend to read documents relating to the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) 20th open meeting on the Dodd-Frank regulations which approved, on October 18th, amongst other things, the final rule on speculative position limits.

To begin with the Oilholic, along with fellow kindred souls in the world of commodities analysis, wonders how a move designated to impose curbs on ‘excessive speculation’ does not actually define it or explains what constitutes admission to the category of ‘excessive speculation.’

The final ruling, according to the CFTC, will establish ground rules for trading 28 ‘core’ commodity futures contracts and also ‘economically equivalent’ futures, options and swaps. The limits are going to be introduced in two phases.

Wait a minute, it gets ‘better’ – limits for ‘spot-month’ will be introduced after the agency further defines what a ‘swap’ contract is (eh???). It seems there is no strict timeline for that definition to come about but the world’s press has been informed that the definition should come before the end of the year. The trading of four energy contracts will be affected – i.e. NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas, NYMEX Light Sweet Crude Oil, NYMEX New York Harbor Gasoline Blendstock and NYMEX New York Harbor Heating Oil.

Michael Haigh, analyst at Société Générale CIB notes, “In the short run therefore these rules might not impact price volatility (they still have to define a swap) and we believe the rules will not decrease volatility or stop commodity price spikes down the road. Increased volatility and price spikes are actually more likely in our opinion. The rules will also create a better paper-trail for the CFTC knowing who is holding what and in which market (swap or futures) but legal challenges to the rule are considered likely.”

As for the nitty-gritty, the initial spot month limits will be the CFTC's legacy limits for agricultural commodities (e.g., 600 contracts for corn, wheat and soybeans, 720 for soybean meal and 540 for soybean oil). For other commodities, exchange limits will be applied. Thereafter, spot limits will be based on 25% of the deliverable supply as determined by the exchanges and these will be adjusted every other year for agricultural contracts but each year for metals and energy.

In the second phase, the CFTC will set limits for positions in non-spot contracts (and all months combined) based on open interest. The CFTC should have that data by August 2012. In practical terms, it appears that the all months combined/single month limits will therefore take effect in late 2012 or early 2013 after the CFTC reviews the data, comes up with limits and imposes them.

The CFTC promises to conduct a study 12 months after implementation and would ‘promptly’ address any problems. However, Haigh notes that by all logical reasoning, the study would be at least one year after full implementation, so sometime in 2014. “A reversal of rules would obviously come much later. By then, the damage may have already been done and the markets would have seen even wider gyrations in prices with the removal of liquidity,” he concludes.

Rounding things up, ABN-AMRO – the ‘once’ troubled Dutch bank is attempting to ‘re-establish’ its international presence to energy, commodities and transportation clients according to a communiqué issued from Amsterdam this morning. To this effect, a new office was opened in Dallas staffed by a 'highly regarded' energy banking team swiped from UBS. More offices are to follow in Moscow and Shanghai over the coming year on top of an existing network of 10 international offices. Lets see how the reboot goes!

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: North Sea oil rig © Cairn Energy Plc

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Crude mood swings, contagion & plenty of chatter

There is a lot going on at the moment for commentators to easily and conveniently adopt a bearish short term stance on the price of crude. Take the dismal US jobs data, Greek crisis, Irish ratings downgrade and fears of contagion to begin with. Combine this with a relatively stronger dollar, end of QE2 liquidity injections, the finances of Chinese local authorities and then some 50-odd Chinese corporates being questioned and finally the US political standoff with all eyes on the Aug 2 deal deadline or the unthinkable.

Additionally, everyone is second guessing what crude price the Saudis would be comfortable with and MENA supply fears are easing. Quite frankly, all of these factors may collectively do more for the cause of those wishing for bearish trends than the IEA’s announcement last month – no not the one about the Golden Age of gas, but the one about it being imperative to raid strategic petroleum reserves in order to ‘curb’ rising prices! The Oilholic remains bullish and is even more convinced that IEA’s move was unwarranted and so are his friends at JP Morgan.

In an investment note, they opined that the effectiveness of IEA’s coordinated release is a matter of some debate and crude prices have rebounded quickly. “But while the US especially has demonstrated a willingness to use oil reserves as a stimulus tool in what has become a rather limited toolbox, a second release will require higher prices and a far more arduous task to achieve unity,” they concluded.

Now, going beyond the short to medium term conjecture, the era of cheap oil, or shall we say cheap energy is fading and fast. An interesting report titled – A new world order: When demand overtakes supply – recently published by Société Générale analysts Véronique Riches-Flores and Loïc de Galzain confirms a chain of thought which is in the mind of many but few seldom talk of. Both analysts in question feel that the last long cycle, which extended from the middle of the 1980s to the middle of the 2000s, was shaped by an environment that strongly favoured the development of supply; the next era will in all likelihood be dictated by demand issues.

Furthermore, they note and the Oilholic quotes: “According to our estimates, energy demand will at least double if not triple over the next two decades. This is significantly more than the IEA is currently projecting, with the difference being mainly attributable to our projections for emerging world energy consumption per capita, which we estimate will considerably rise as these countries develop. Applied to the oil market, these projections mean that today’s proven oil reserves, which are currently expected to meet 45 years of global demand based on the present rate of production, would be exhausted within 15-22 years.”

IEA itself estimates that demand will grow by an average of 1.47 million barrels a day (bpd) in 2012, up from the current 2011 average of 1.2 million bpd. Moving away from crystal ball gazing, Bloomberg’s latest figures confirm that record outflows from commodity ETPs (ETF, ETC and ETN) observed in May slowed abruptly. According to SG Cross Asset Research apart from net inflows into precious metals – the biggest sub-segment measured by assets under management – other categories such as Energy and base metals saw limited net outflows (see table on the left, click to enlarge).

Meanwhile, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) was busy welcoming another new issuer of ETFs – Ossiam – on to its UK markets on Monday. It is already the largest ETF venue in Europe by number of issuers; 20 to be exact. According to a spokesperson there are 481 ETFs listed on the LSE. In H1 2010 there were 369,600 ETF trades worth a combined £19 billion on the Exchange's order book, a 40.3% and 33.5% increase respectively on the same period last year.

Switching to corporates and continuing with the LSE, today Ophir Energy plc was admitted to the Main Market. The company listed on the Premium segment of the Main Market and raised US$375 million at admission and has a market capitalisation of US$1.28 billion.

Ophir is an independent firm with assets in a number of African countries particularly Tanzania and Equatorial Guinea. Since its foundation in 2004, the company has acquired an extensive portfolio of exploration interests consisting of 17 projects in nine jurisdictions in Africa.

The company is one of the top five holders of deepwater exploration acreage in Africa in terms of net area and could be one to watch. So far it has made five discoveries of natural gas off Tanzania and Equatorial Guinea and has recently started drilling in the offshore Kora Prospect in the Senegal Guinea Bissau Common Zone. For the LSE itself, Ophir brings the number of companies with major operations in sub-Saharan Africa listed on its books to 79.

Across the pond, Vanguard Natural Resources (VNR) announced on Monday that it will buy the rest of Encore Energy Partners LP it does not already own for US$545 million, gaining full access to the latter’s oil-heavy reserves. While its shares fell 8% on the news, the Oilholic believes it is a positive statement of intent by VNR in line with moves made by other E&P companies to secure reserves with an eye on bullish demand forecasts over the medium term.

Meanwhile, a horror story with wider implications is unfolding in the US, as ExxonMobil’s Silvertip pipeline leaked oil into the Montana stretch of the Yellowstone River on July 1. The company estimates that almost 42,000 gallons may have leaked and invariably questions were again asked by environmentalists about the wisdom of giving the Keystone XL project the go-ahead. This is not what the US needed when President Obama was making all the right noises – crudely speaking that is.

In March, he expressed a desire to include Canadian and Mexican oil in the US energy mix, in May he said new leases would be sold each year in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve, and oil and gas fields in the Atlantic Ocean would be evaluated as a high priority. To cap it all, last month, the President reaffirmed that despite the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, drilling there remained a core part of the country's future energy supply and new incentives would be offered for on and offshore development. Leases already held but affected by the President's drilling moratorium, imposed in wake of the BP spill, would be eligible for extensions, he added. The ExxonMobil leak may not impact the wider picture but will certainly darken the mood on Capitol Hill.

Russians and Norwegians have no hang-ups about crude prospection in inhospitable climates – i.e. the Arctic. Details are now emerging about an agreement signed by the two countries in June which came into effect on July 7. Under the terms, both countries’ state oil firms – i.e. Russia’s Gazprom and Norway’s Statoil – will divide up their shares of the Barents Sea. USGS estimates from 2008 suggest the Arctic was likely to hold 30% of the world's undiscovered gas and 13% of its oil.

Finally, Sugar Land, Texas-based Industrial Info Resources (IIR) came-up with some interesting findings on the Canadian oil sands. In a report last week, the research firm noted that Canada's Top 10 metals and minerals industry projects are large scale oil sands and metal mining endeavours, with the No. 1 being in Alberta's oil sands.

IIR observed that what was once considered a “large project” was now being dwarfed by “megaprojects”. Not long ago a project valued at CAD$1 billion was considered a mega project; now the norm is more in the region of CAD$5 billion (and above) for a project to earn that accolade. Not to mention the fact that the Canadian dollar has been stronger in relative terms in recent years and not necessarily suffering from a mild case of the Dutch disease like its Australian counterpart. IIR’s findings take the Oilholic nicely back to his visit to Calgary in March, a report he authored for Infrastructure Journal and a conversation he had with veteran legal expert Scott Rusty Miller based in Canada's oil capital. We concurred that while the oil sands developments face myriad challenges they are certainly on the way up. The Canadians are developers with scruples and permit healthy levels of outside scrutiny more than many (or perhaps any) other jurisdictions.

IIR recorded US$176 billion worth of oil sands projects and all of the projected investment capital, except for one project in Utah, is in Alberta. It is becoming more likely than ever that Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s dream of Canada becoming an energy super power will be realised sooner rather than later.

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo 1: Pump Jacks Perryton, Texas © Joel Sartore, National Geographic. Photo 2: Shell Athabasca Oil Sands site work © Royal Dutch Shell. Table: Global Commodity ETPs: Inflows analysis by category © Société Générale July 2011.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Shell Divests, BP Invests and Libya Implodes!

Earlier on Monday, oil giant Shell announced its intentions to sell most of its African downstream businesses to Swiss group Vitol and Helios Investment Partners for US$1 billion adding that it will create two new joint ventures under the proposed deal.

The first of these JVs will own and operate Shell's existing oil products, distribution and retailing businesses in 14 African countries, most notably in Egypt, Morocco, Kenya, Uganda and Madagascar.

The second JV will own and operate Shell's existing lubricants blending plants in seven countries. The move is in line with Shell’s policy of divesting its non-core assets. It sold US$7 billion of non-core assets in 2010. While Shell was divesting in Africa, BP was investing in India via a strategic oil & gas partnership with Reliance Industries.

Both companies will form a 50:50 joint venture for sourcing and marketing hydrocarbons in India. The agreement will give BP a 30% stake in 23 oil and gas blocks owned by Reliance including 19 off the east coast of India. Market feedback suggests the deal is heavily weighted towards gas rather than the crude stuff.

In return for the stake, BP will invest US$7.2 billion in the venture and a further US$1.8 billion in future performance-related investments. The combined capital costs are slated to be in the region of US$20 billon with local media already branding it as the largest foreign direct investment deal in India by a foreign company.

Switching focus to the Middle Eastern unrest, what is happening from Morocco to Bahrain is having a massive bearing on the instability premium factoring in to the price of crude. However, the impact of each country’s regional upheaval on the crude price is not uniform. I summarise it as follows based on the perceived oil endowment (or the lack of it) for each country:

• Morocco (negligible)
• Algeria (marginal)
• Egypt (marginal)
• Iran (difficult to gauge at the moment)
• Tunisia (negligible)
• Bahrain (marginal)
• Libya (substantial)

Of these, it is obvious to the wider market that what is happening in Libya is one of concern. More so as the unrest has become unruly and the future may well be uncertain as the OPEC member country accounts for around 2% of the daily global crude production.

Italian and French oil companies with historic ties to the region are among those most vulnerable, though having said so BP also has substantial assets there. Austria’s OMV and Norway’s Statoil are other notable operators in Libya. A bigger worry could be if Iran erupts in a similar unruly way. Given the international sanctions against Iran, oil majors are not as involved there as they are in Libya. However, the question Iran’s crude oil endowment and its impact on the oil markets is an entirely different matter.

Finally, the ICE Brent crude forward month futures contract stood at US$108.25 per barrel, up 5.6% in intraday trading last time checked. I feel there is at least US$10 worth of instability premium in there, although one city source reckons it could be as high as US$15. The "What if" side analysts (as I call them) are having a field day - having already moved their focus from Iran to Saudi Arabia.

© Gaurav Sharma 2011. Photo: Vintage Shell gasoline pump, Ghirardelli Square, San Francisco, California, USA © Gaurav Sharma, March 2010