I bought some LNCO yesterday. I think it will take a couple quarters for "the smoke to clear" after the merger with BRY, but I think both LINE and LNCO are trading at about 20% below Fair Value. With a very high percentage of the production hedged, the dividends appear to be rock solid to me. - Dan
LINN Energy and LinnCo Announce Monthly Distribution and Dividend
HOUSTON, Jan. 2, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- LINN Energy, LLC (Nasdaq:LINE) and LinnCo, LLC (Nasdaq:LNCO) announced today monthly distributions and dividends, respectively.
LINN Energy, LLC declared a monthly cash distribution of $0.2416 per unit, or $2.90 per unit on an annualized basis, for all of its outstanding units. The distribution will be payable January 16, 2014, to unitholders of record as of the close of business on January 13, 2014.
LinnCo, LLC declared a monthly cash dividend of $0.2416 per common share, or $2.90 per share on an annualized basis, for all of its outstanding common shares. The dividend will be payable January 17, 2014, to shareholders of record as of the close of business on January 13, 2014.
ABOUT LINN ENERGY
LINN Energy's mission is to acquire, develop and maximize cash flow from a growing portfolio of long-life oil and natural gas assets. LINN Energy is a top-15 U.S. independent oil and natural gas development company, with approximately 4.8 Tcfe of proved reserves in producing U.S. basins as of December 31, 2012. More information about LINN Energy is available at www.linnenergy.com.
ABOUT LINNCO
LinnCo was created to enhance LINN Energy's ability to raise additional equity capital to execute on its acquisition and growth strategy. LinnCo is a Delaware limited liability company that has elected to be taxed as a corporation for United States federal income tax purposes, and accordingly its shareholders will receive a Form 1099 in respect of any dividends paid by LinnCo. More information about LinnCo is available at www.linnco.com.
LINE and LNCO
LINE and LNCO
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
Energy Prospectus Group
Re: LINE and LNCO
Updated from 9:18 a.m. ET to include Leon Cooperman comment and afternoon share prices.
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- JPMorgan analysts see value in Linn Energy (LINE_) now that the upstream oil and gas master limited partnership has closed an often challenged acquisition of Berry Petroleum and put some investor uncertainty to rest heading into 2014.
With the acquisition now complete, JPMorgan analysts reinitiated coverage of Linn Energy with an "overweight" rating and $36 price target, asserting that investors will now have the ability to refocus on the driller's operational performance and its ability to grow earnings and cash flow through a steady diet of acquisition activity in coming years.
JPMorgan also said that while an informal Securities and Exchange Commission review of Linn Energy's finances may remain ongoing, it will no longer challenge the Berry merger and may not remain a big issue on investor's minds.
"We believe investors can now refocus on operations, as the closure of the Berry merger eliminates a major overhang that created volatility and uncertainty in the LP units," JPMorgan analysts said on Monday. They highlighted Linn Energy's structure, which uses LinnCo (LNCO_) as a vehicle to make acquisitions on a tax-free basis, as a strategic advantage. Meanwhile, after the Berry merger, Linn Energy will have achieved a scale far beyond its upstream MLP competitors, potentially giving the company the ability to make acquisitions that provide consistent earnings and cash flow growth.
"Competition to acquire quality assets in the E&P space has become fierce, in our view, and we consider Linn Energy's larger relative size as a strategic advantage," JPMorgan said.
In mid-December, Linn Energy completed its acquisition of Berry Petroleum. The deal's closure came after a series of amended proxy statements on the merger, the SEC's requirement that the company retire some non-GAAP financial metrics it had disclosed to investors and an amended stock offer for Berry Petroleum.
Linn Energy, through its acquisition unit LinnCo, was forced to offer 1.68 shares for each Berry Petroleum share, in a $4.9 billion transaction when including debt. The Houston-based driller previously offered Berry Petroleum investors 1.25 shares of LinnCo for each of their shares, however, uncertainty over the firm's accounting practices and a battered share price caused the company to raise the stock merger ratio. Linn Energy also said that Berry's improving performance compelled a higher stock exchange ratio.
JPMorgan now forecasts that in the wake of the merger, Linn Energy will be able to increase its cash distributions to shareholders by 5% year-over-year through 2015, driven by oil and gas production the company has acquired. The analysts also project that Linn Energy will continue to make acquisitions in the range of $1 billion a year starting in 2015. Through acquisitions, Linn Energy is expected to create a base of reserves split evenly between oil and natural gas, JPMorgan said.
For now, Linn Energy's monthly distributions to shareholders remain at $2.90 a share on an annualized basis.
Linn Energy's accounting practices and the non-GAAP metrics that drive its dividend came under scrutiny in 2013, as the firm worked to complete its acquisition of Berry Petroleum.
Both Barron's and independent research firm Hedgeye Risk Management argued Linn's use non-GAAP accounting figures overstated the cash flow it could pay out to shareholders and under-reported the expenses tied to its hedging practices and drilling capital expenditure. Hedgeye also calculated that Linn Energy's cost of replacing its oil and gas production was about $25 per barrel of oil equivalent (BoE), while the company's financial results and analyst calculations generally indicated replacement costs of about $15 per BoE.
As part of a series of amended proxy filings with the SEC on its Berry Merger, Linn Energy said in September it re-defined some non-GAAP financial metrics such as maintenance capital expenditure and distributable cash flow (DCF). However, those changing definitions didn't impacted Linn Energy's underlying financial picture.
Instead of "maintenance capital expenditure" Linn Energy now uses the term "discretionary reductions for a portion of oil and natural gas development costs." This metric includes estimated drilling and development costs to convert the company's energy reserves to producing status. The metric, however, doesn't include the historical cost of the company's acquired oil and gas properties.
Those accounting changes and their minimal impact to Linn's reported financial results proved helpful in the company's attempt to close its Berry acquisition. However, in the wake of the deal's closure, Hedgeye analyst Kevin Kaiser maintained that Linn Energy would struggle to generate the oil and gas production and cash flows to maintain or grow its high dividend yield.
Large investors like Leon Cooperman of hedge fund Omega Advisors contested assertions that Linn Energy was being overly aggressive or misleading in its accounting disclosures.
"We were supportive. We own it and continue to own," Cooperman said in am e-mail to TheStreet on Monday, Securities and Exchange Commission filings show that Omega Advisors continues to be among Linn Energy's largest shareholders with a holding of nearly three million shares with $93 million at current prices. Filings as of the third quarter show Omega pared its holding from over six million shares at the start of 2013.
While investors were forced to revisit Linn Energy's accounting during much of 2013, the focus will now be on the company's operational performance. The business continues to have some risks, predominantly centered around maintaining oil and gas production growth rates and also surrounding the execution of its drilling program.
JPMorgan analysts note that 38% of Linn Energy's total reserves are undeveloped, meaning that the company carries operational risk. "Lower-than-expected results at the Hogshooter drilling program provide a recent example of potential drilling risk. Ongoing issues or missed targets on future programs could drive underperformance," JPMorgan said when discussing risks Linn Energy faces.
Other issues could be Linn Energy's unhedged natural gas liquids production, which accounts for roughly 20% of the company's total production. [I view their unhedged NGLs as a plus. I believe the price of NGLs will be drifting higher this year. - Dan]
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- JPMorgan analysts see value in Linn Energy (LINE_) now that the upstream oil and gas master limited partnership has closed an often challenged acquisition of Berry Petroleum and put some investor uncertainty to rest heading into 2014.
With the acquisition now complete, JPMorgan analysts reinitiated coverage of Linn Energy with an "overweight" rating and $36 price target, asserting that investors will now have the ability to refocus on the driller's operational performance and its ability to grow earnings and cash flow through a steady diet of acquisition activity in coming years.
JPMorgan also said that while an informal Securities and Exchange Commission review of Linn Energy's finances may remain ongoing, it will no longer challenge the Berry merger and may not remain a big issue on investor's minds.
"We believe investors can now refocus on operations, as the closure of the Berry merger eliminates a major overhang that created volatility and uncertainty in the LP units," JPMorgan analysts said on Monday. They highlighted Linn Energy's structure, which uses LinnCo (LNCO_) as a vehicle to make acquisitions on a tax-free basis, as a strategic advantage. Meanwhile, after the Berry merger, Linn Energy will have achieved a scale far beyond its upstream MLP competitors, potentially giving the company the ability to make acquisitions that provide consistent earnings and cash flow growth.
"Competition to acquire quality assets in the E&P space has become fierce, in our view, and we consider Linn Energy's larger relative size as a strategic advantage," JPMorgan said.
In mid-December, Linn Energy completed its acquisition of Berry Petroleum. The deal's closure came after a series of amended proxy statements on the merger, the SEC's requirement that the company retire some non-GAAP financial metrics it had disclosed to investors and an amended stock offer for Berry Petroleum.
Linn Energy, through its acquisition unit LinnCo, was forced to offer 1.68 shares for each Berry Petroleum share, in a $4.9 billion transaction when including debt. The Houston-based driller previously offered Berry Petroleum investors 1.25 shares of LinnCo for each of their shares, however, uncertainty over the firm's accounting practices and a battered share price caused the company to raise the stock merger ratio. Linn Energy also said that Berry's improving performance compelled a higher stock exchange ratio.
JPMorgan now forecasts that in the wake of the merger, Linn Energy will be able to increase its cash distributions to shareholders by 5% year-over-year through 2015, driven by oil and gas production the company has acquired. The analysts also project that Linn Energy will continue to make acquisitions in the range of $1 billion a year starting in 2015. Through acquisitions, Linn Energy is expected to create a base of reserves split evenly between oil and natural gas, JPMorgan said.
For now, Linn Energy's monthly distributions to shareholders remain at $2.90 a share on an annualized basis.
Linn Energy's accounting practices and the non-GAAP metrics that drive its dividend came under scrutiny in 2013, as the firm worked to complete its acquisition of Berry Petroleum.
Both Barron's and independent research firm Hedgeye Risk Management argued Linn's use non-GAAP accounting figures overstated the cash flow it could pay out to shareholders and under-reported the expenses tied to its hedging practices and drilling capital expenditure. Hedgeye also calculated that Linn Energy's cost of replacing its oil and gas production was about $25 per barrel of oil equivalent (BoE), while the company's financial results and analyst calculations generally indicated replacement costs of about $15 per BoE.
As part of a series of amended proxy filings with the SEC on its Berry Merger, Linn Energy said in September it re-defined some non-GAAP financial metrics such as maintenance capital expenditure and distributable cash flow (DCF). However, those changing definitions didn't impacted Linn Energy's underlying financial picture.
Instead of "maintenance capital expenditure" Linn Energy now uses the term "discretionary reductions for a portion of oil and natural gas development costs." This metric includes estimated drilling and development costs to convert the company's energy reserves to producing status. The metric, however, doesn't include the historical cost of the company's acquired oil and gas properties.
Those accounting changes and their minimal impact to Linn's reported financial results proved helpful in the company's attempt to close its Berry acquisition. However, in the wake of the deal's closure, Hedgeye analyst Kevin Kaiser maintained that Linn Energy would struggle to generate the oil and gas production and cash flows to maintain or grow its high dividend yield.
Large investors like Leon Cooperman of hedge fund Omega Advisors contested assertions that Linn Energy was being overly aggressive or misleading in its accounting disclosures.
"We were supportive. We own it and continue to own," Cooperman said in am e-mail to TheStreet on Monday, Securities and Exchange Commission filings show that Omega Advisors continues to be among Linn Energy's largest shareholders with a holding of nearly three million shares with $93 million at current prices. Filings as of the third quarter show Omega pared its holding from over six million shares at the start of 2013.
While investors were forced to revisit Linn Energy's accounting during much of 2013, the focus will now be on the company's operational performance. The business continues to have some risks, predominantly centered around maintaining oil and gas production growth rates and also surrounding the execution of its drilling program.
JPMorgan analysts note that 38% of Linn Energy's total reserves are undeveloped, meaning that the company carries operational risk. "Lower-than-expected results at the Hogshooter drilling program provide a recent example of potential drilling risk. Ongoing issues or missed targets on future programs could drive underperformance," JPMorgan said when discussing risks Linn Energy faces.
Other issues could be Linn Energy's unhedged natural gas liquids production, which accounts for roughly 20% of the company's total production. [I view their unhedged NGLs as a plus. I believe the price of NGLs will be drifting higher this year. - Dan]
Dan Steffens
Energy Prospectus Group
Energy Prospectus Group