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Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2013 11:27 am
by dan_s
Gulfport estimates 2013 production to be in the range of 7.8 million to 8.1 million BOE. Capital expenditures for drilling activities and infrastructure projects during 2013 are estimated to be in the range of $458 million to $512 million.

I am working on the forecast model and will have it updated early this afternoon.

Check out their new presentation.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2013 12:33 pm
by dan_s
Conference call at 12:00 CT. You can listen on the web. Just go to their website.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2013 1:13 pm
by setliff
<---2013 production to be in the range of 7.8 million to 8.1 million BOE.>

WOW :!: that's up from only 2.57 yoy. :D shoulda bought more at 35.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2013 2:16 pm
by dan_s
Gulfport's estimated production by quarter in 2013:
Q1 = 7,000 boepd
Q2 = 14,000
Q3 = 31,000
Q4 = 34,800
For full year average of 21,700 boepd, which does not include their share of Grizzly Oil Sands production.

If they hit these levels the market should get very excited.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2013 2:26 pm
by dan_s
An updated Net Income & Cash Flow Forecast model for Gulfport Energy (GPOR) has been posted under the Sweet 16 Tab.

Note that GPOR owns 21.4% equity in Diamond Energy (FANG). I have nothing in my forecast model for this stake in a growing Permian Basin company.

GPOR has triple digit production growth locked in for the next two years. It should be a very interesting year for this one.

Also, Markwest Energy (MWE) is going to benefit from Gulfport's rapid production growth. MWE in our new High Yield Income Portfolio.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2013 9:13 am
by setliff
COVERAGE REITERATED: Gulfport Energy (GPOR) reiterated by Wunderlich. Reiterated rating Buy. 02/28 07:27 AM
pt raised from 48>>54

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2013 9:57 am
by dan_s
If you listen to Wednesday's GPOR conference call you will understand why I think we are going to see a lot more upgrades.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Fri Mar 08, 2013 9:12 am
by setliff
article speaks of gpor, epm, sara et al-----------

http://seekingalpha.com/article/1258801 ... urce=yahoo

Oil And Gas Companies Analyst Joel Musante Digs
Mar 8 2013, 08:21 by: The Energy Report | includes: AXAS, DNR, EPM, GPOR, NBL, PDCE, SARA Many observers believe that the best days of domestic oil and gas production are long gone -- and they may be right. But that doesn't mean there isn't a lot more petroleum product to be found right here in North America, even in fields that have been previously worked. In this interview with The Energy Report, Joel Musante, a senior research analyst at C. K. Cooper, profiles several companies that are still coming up with some impressive numbers.

The Energy Report: If your outlook hasn't changed much since your last interview, "Quality Oil and Gas Stocks Are on Sale," let's jump right into specific companies you follow that look interesting right now.

Joel Musante: One name I like a lot is Gulfport Energy Corp. (GPOR), which recently established a pretty sizeable position in the Utica shale play. The Utica is one of the newest shale plays, and Gulfport has a sizeable leasehold position there totaling about 128,000 net acres. Based on early well results, production rates for Gulfport look very strong and much better than other companies in the play. I think it's safe to say it is in the sweet spot.

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TER: Is that by pure luck or by great engineering?

JM: When you're going into a new area where there hasn't been a lot of drilling, you have to come up with a geologic interpretation of what's going on there. Gulfport leased most of its acreage where there had been little oil and gas development in the past. The company believes the formation on its leasehold is over pressured because it had been sealed by an impermeable geologic barrier.

Based on early production data from wells drilled to date, Gulfport has had very solid results across most of its leasehold. Gulfport's third-party reserve engineering report reaffirmed the strong production data when the engineer calculated the reserves for one well at 1.8 million barrels oil equivalent, which we thought was a good number.

TER: So how many more wells are going to be drilled there?

JM: The company has identified about 850 gross well locations, but there could be a lot more depending on the drainage pattern of the wells. Gulfport plans to drill 50 wells this year and 70 wells over the next two years. Those are early estimates and as it drills and gets infrastructure in place, those numbers can be increased.

TER: Is it conceivable that all those wells could have similar reserves or was that just the first one?

JM: That particular well was called the Wagner well, and was on the gassier side of the Utica play. Usually gassier wells have more reserves, but because gas is sold at a lower price than oil on an equivalent basis, the reserves may not be worth as much. Reserve estimates for wells containing more oil and natural gas liquids may be lower, but because these liquids sell for a higher price than gas, the returns may actually be higher. Based on what the company has achieved so far, we are expecting good results from Gulfport's Utica development program.

I have a 12-month $60 price target on Gulfport. We are expecting to see a significant ramp-up in production this year. You don't see wells like this every day and the finding costs are extremely low.

TER: What else are you following that looks interesting?

JM: Evolution Petroleum Corp. (EPM) is a small company whose main asset is an interest in the Delhi field in Louisiana that's operated by Denbury Resources Inc. (DNR). That field had already been produced on a primary basis a long time ago. Now Denbury, a company known for CO2 recovery, is doing enhanced tertiary recovery there in phases. The first couple of phases have ramped up production from nearly zero to over 6,000 barrels per day [6,000 b/d] in the field.

TER: That's a significant ramp up. Is that going to fall off pretty quickly?

JM: No. It's still going through this development phase and will be for the next couple of years, so we expect the production to actually get up to over 12 million b/d on a field-wide basis. Denbury owns most of the field, but Evolution owns a meaningful interest. Evolution's agreement with Denbury allows Denbury to recover its capital costs before Evolution receives its reversionary working interest of about 20% of the production. We expect Evolution's oil production to nearly triple later this year when this reversionary working interest kicks in, after Denbury recovers its initial development costs.

TER: That should give the stock a decent kick.

JM: Right. We think that Evolution's management will put the company up for sale after this reversionary working interest kicks in. The increase in production would likely make the firm a more attractive takeover candidate. Evolution Petroleum shares trade at about $10.10 now and we have a 12-month price target of $14.

TER: That's pretty decent upside. Speaking of which, last time we talked about PDC Energy Inc. (PDCE), which was in the low twenties after having been hit and you had a $45 target on it. Now it's almost at that price. That's done a nice double here in only nine months. What do you think is going to happen from here?

JM: It had some perceived tight liquidity issues, which is why it was in the low twenties. A couple of things have happened since then. First, there have been some positive developments announced by several operators in the Wattenberg field. Most notably, Noble Energy Inc. (NBL), a leader in the Wattenberg field, increased its estimate for horizontal drilling locations to 32 wells for one square-mile section. This was a big value driver for many of the companies that operate in the Wattenberg field, including PDC, which has a substantial leasehold in the area. Noble began drilling horizontal wells in the Niobrara B formation in the Wattenberg field a few years ago with great success. Since then, the company began testing tighter well spacing in the Niobrara B, Niobrara A and Codell formations. So far, horizontal development of these formations also looks very promising.

TER: What was the other point?

JM: PDC put some of its liquidity issues to rest when it announced the sale of its Piceance and NECO gas fields for $200 million [$200M]. The company was not doing very much in terms of development with these fields, and by monetizing the assets it could now reinvest the proceeds from the sale into high-return development projects in the Wattenberg field.

PDC also has a sizeable leasehold position in the Utica shale play in Ohio. The company will still need to derisk the majority of its acreage by drilling wells in new areas to prove its potential for commercial development. We think there is a lot of upside potential for the stock if results are good.

TER: So, what do you think the prospects are for the company at this point? Does the stock still have some upside from here?

JM: I think the stock still has upside from here. It looks cheap compared to other Wattenberg-focused companies. We have a $56 price target and the stock is $46.

TER: Are there any other new ones you'd like to talk about that look interesting?

JM: Things look like they're going pretty well for Abraxas Petroleum Corp. (AXAS). We've had a $3.25 price target and it's currently trading at about $2.03. It's becoming a much more focused company. It's selling non-core assets, paying down debt and reinvesting the money into its two main areas, which are its operating Bakken acreage position and its Eagle Ford acreage position. The company announced last week that it's going to sell its non-operating Bakken properties, which amounts to about 14,000 acres, and Abraxas can then reinvest that money into its operating Bakken acreage and drill more wells on its Eagle Ford acreage.

TER: What amount could Abraxas stand to gain from that sale?

JM: We're estimating probably $50-70M. With that, it can pay down a lot of its debt and have money to drill more wells and grow faster.

TER: How expensive are these new wells to drill?

JM: Depending on how many net wells it drills, it works out to be about $8-9M per net well.

TER: Any other companies you're watching now?

JM: Saratoga Resources Inc. (SARA) is in the shallow state waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The stock's very cheap right now due to some operational problems, which have caused some liquidity issues. After Hurricane Isaac, it lost some production, causing it to borrow some money to keep its drilling program going. The stock sold off with all these events and now it's trading around $3. The value of its reserves are much more than that. It hasn't yet come out with a new reserve report for 2012, but last year's reserves were worth about $9 per share. So we think there's a lot of upside there, but the company's going to have to show the market that it can bring on some low-risk projects. If it does that, we're looking for a rebound in the stock.

TER: Do you have any other thoughts you'd like to leave with our readers?

JM: Last year, we began to see a much more disciplined approach to natural gas development after prices fell below $2 per British thermal unit. Many companies that were drilling noncommercial wells to hold acreage changed their strategies, slowing development and allowing their lease terms on some acreage to expire. While there is still an oversupply of natural gas, storage levels have returned to more normal levels. As a result, we think there is less downside to natural gas prices than there has been in the past. Many of the stocks I discussed today have a balanced mix of natural gas and liquids production, which could be a good strategy if the development economics offer attractive returns under conservative pricing assumptions.

TER: Thanks for speaking with us today, Joel.

JM: Thanks.

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Fri Mar 08, 2013 3:12 pm
by setliff
$60 is becoming unanimous---

Analyst Actions: Gulfport Energy Corp. Ests Revised, Target Raised $3 at Credit Suisse; Shrs At Yr Highs 03/08 02:04 PM

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03:04 PM EST, 03/08/2013 (MidnightTrader) -- Credit Suisse says: "NAV Growth Trumps Execution Risk; Revising Estimates and Raising Target Price to $60 (from $57)"

Raise TP to $60, Reiterate Outperform. "Following 4Q12 results, we raise our target price to $60 (from $57) as we account for additional Utica inventory in our NAV estimate (from ~280 to 360 gross locations). We adjust our 2013/2014 EPS estimates -10%/+2% to $1.11/$3.02 on changes to our production and commodity price estimates and introduce our 2015 estimate of $3.16."

NAV Growth Will Continue to Overshadow Aggressive Guidance. "While aggressive 2013 production guidance (200-212% production growth) remains the primary push-back on the story, the reaction to flattish 1Q13 production growth sequentially demonstrates little near-term concern on the execution front, in our view. Despite 1Q13 guidance of 6.8-7.2 mboe/d, management reaffirmed 2013 production guidance of 21.4-22.2 mboe/d on the 4Q12 call. Further discussion with management this week following the announcement of delays to the Cadiz I and II processing plants by MarkWest (MWE) indicate GPOR remains confident in its 2013 production estimates. MWE anticipates having 385 mmcf/d of processing capacity online by 3Q13, and we estimate GPOR will average ~120 mmcfe/d of gas and NGL production volumes in 4Q13 leaving ample capacity."

Additional Utica Results 30-60 Days Out. "GPOR recently completed the two-well Lyon pad in southwestern Harrison County, OH and expects to flow the wells back in 30-60 days. In addition, the company recently began completion operations on the two-well Stout pad, also in southwestern Harrison County."

Valuation. "GPOR trades at a 29% discount to our revised 'PD-Plus' NAV estimate compared to a 13% discount for its peers. On EV/EBITDA (unhedged, futures strip), GPOR trades 8.8x 2013E and 4.2x 2014E vs. the peer group at 6.4x and 4.6x, respectively."

Re: Why GPOR is up today

Posted: Fri Mar 08, 2013 5:32 pm
by dan_s
My fair value estimate for GPOR is $60/share. It is very important to keep in mind that Q1 production will only be up 400-500 boepd from Q4, which may cause some concerns. However, production growth after that will be very impressive. Here is my guess by quarter:

6,614 boepd = Q4 2012 actual
7,000 boepd = Q1 Estimate
14,000 boepd = Q2
31,000 boepd = Q3
35,000 boepd = Q4

The reason for the slow start is because many completed wells are waiting to be tied into the Markwest gathering system. By mid-Q2 MWE will be hooking up a lot of wells. GPOR has 14 wells completed and ready to be tied in. They are drilling 50 more this year. Newer wells will be much closer to the MWE system.

A minor concern for me is the product mix. I want to see how much they get for the NGLs and condensate. I believe my forecast model is conservative. You can find it under the Sweet 16 Tab.

If the engineers give them EURs of close to 1 MMboe per well, GPOR has HUGE upside for us.