Sweet 16 Update - April 6
Posted: Sat Apr 06, 2019 9:49 am
The Sweet 16 moved up 1.2% for the week ending April 5 and is now up 15.4%.
On April 4th RBC Capital Markets published a new 29 page report on upstream oil & gas companies, which includes their Net Asset Valuation ("NAV") for all of the 50+ companies that they cover. If you would like to receive the RBC report, send me an email > dmsteffens@comcast.net
NAV = Current Assets + PV10 of Fixed Assets based on each company's year-end reserve report filed with the SEC, but using NYMEX strip prices.
NAV should be close to what each company's liquidation value is today +/- a few dollars.
Here are RBC's NAV's for the Sweet 16 companies included in the report. Note that most of them are very close to my valuations.
$20 for Callon Petroleum (CPE)
$36 for Carrizo Oil & Gas (CRZO)
$20 for Centennial Resource Development (CDEV)
$190 for Concho Resouces (CXO)
$73 for Continental Resources (CLR)
$133 for EOG Resources (EOG)
$41 for Matador Resources (MTDR)
$41 for Parsley Energy (PE)
$230 for Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD)
$30 for Range Resources (RRC)
$7 for Southwestern Resources (SWN)
EIA reported an earlier than normal build in the natural gas in storage for the week ending March 29. I expect EIA to report another build for the week ending April 5. Colder than normal weather is expected to return to 2/3s of the U.S. this coming week, but we are definitely in the "Shoulder Season" when natural gas in storage must build. When real HOT summer weather arrives, the weekly builds will shrink because we now have a lot more gas fired power plants.
Permian Basin gas exceeds pipeline takeaway capacity, which caused the spot prices for gas in West Texas to go negative. Gas prices in the Permian will remain depressed until more pipelines open up late this year. All four of the "gassers" in the Sweet 16 (AR, GPOR, RRC and SWN) do not have production in West Texas. Most of their gas is produced in Appalachia (Marcellus & Utica) where the differentials to Henry Hub gas prices have been reduce thanks to several more pipelines now serving that region. All four companies have a HIGH percentage of their gas hedged at good prices.
The updated Sweet 16 spreadsheet is now on the EPG website. Under Tab 2 you can find my valuation for each company compared to First Call's current price target.
On April 4th RBC Capital Markets published a new 29 page report on upstream oil & gas companies, which includes their Net Asset Valuation ("NAV") for all of the 50+ companies that they cover. If you would like to receive the RBC report, send me an email > dmsteffens@comcast.net
NAV = Current Assets + PV10 of Fixed Assets based on each company's year-end reserve report filed with the SEC, but using NYMEX strip prices.
NAV should be close to what each company's liquidation value is today +/- a few dollars.
Here are RBC's NAV's for the Sweet 16 companies included in the report. Note that most of them are very close to my valuations.
$20 for Callon Petroleum (CPE)
$36 for Carrizo Oil & Gas (CRZO)
$20 for Centennial Resource Development (CDEV)
$190 for Concho Resouces (CXO)
$73 for Continental Resources (CLR)
$133 for EOG Resources (EOG)
$41 for Matador Resources (MTDR)
$41 for Parsley Energy (PE)
$230 for Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD)
$30 for Range Resources (RRC)
$7 for Southwestern Resources (SWN)
EIA reported an earlier than normal build in the natural gas in storage for the week ending March 29. I expect EIA to report another build for the week ending April 5. Colder than normal weather is expected to return to 2/3s of the U.S. this coming week, but we are definitely in the "Shoulder Season" when natural gas in storage must build. When real HOT summer weather arrives, the weekly builds will shrink because we now have a lot more gas fired power plants.
Permian Basin gas exceeds pipeline takeaway capacity, which caused the spot prices for gas in West Texas to go negative. Gas prices in the Permian will remain depressed until more pipelines open up late this year. All four of the "gassers" in the Sweet 16 (AR, GPOR, RRC and SWN) do not have production in West Texas. Most of their gas is produced in Appalachia (Marcellus & Utica) where the differentials to Henry Hub gas prices have been reduce thanks to several more pipelines now serving that region. All four companies have a HIGH percentage of their gas hedged at good prices.
The updated Sweet 16 spreadsheet is now on the EPG website. Under Tab 2 you can find my valuation for each company compared to First Call's current price target.