ROSE
Posted: Mon Sep 27, 2010 12:11 pm
Alert: Premium Members should read my Company Profile on Rosetta Resources (ROSE) which can be found under the "Watch List" Tab. This is also good news for Sweet-16 member NFX. KWK is on our Watch List. - Dan
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The Bakken oil play is already one of the largest onshore oil discoveries in North America in decades.
But producers in both Canada and the U.S. are still pushing out the “generally accepted” boundaries of the play – mostly to the west, into Alberta and into Montana from North Dakota – even as far as western Montana.
Rosetta Resources (NASDAQ: ROSE), Newfield (NYSE: NFX) and Quicksilver (NYSE: KWK) have all pushed the boundaries of what is known to be productive Bakken land – theirs is in northwestern Montana, right up against the Alberta border, in what is known as the Alberta Basin Bakken play.
Not only is their land far west of all the development activity in North Dakota, it is also outside the six assessment units that the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) designated when it conducted the assessment of the Bakken Formation, Williston Basin Province as late as 2008.(1)
These producers have established big land positions in the Alberta Bakken play of 100,000 – 300,000 acres each in Montana.
And a land position that size in this very young play has the ability to make a tangible difference in production- and potentially stock price- for three large U.S. producers – Rosetta Resources (ROSE: 286,000 net acres), Newfield Exploration (NFX: 224,000 net acres) and Quicksilver Resources (KWK: 130,000 net acres).
A fourth NYSE-listed producer, Murphy Oil Corporation (NYSE: MUR) also recently announced a large, 200 section (130,000 acre) land position in the area.
There are few juniors in the play. Canada’s Primary Petroleum (PIE-TSXv) is the leading junior with 127,000 acres, but Bowood Energy (BWD-TSXv), Mountainview Energy (MVW-TSXv) and Covenant Resources (CVA-TSXv) are also there, with smaller land positions.
None of the big three producers in the play talk much about the Alberta Bakken, as the play is called (even in Montana) on their website or in their literature. These companies are continually acquiring more land, although they are drilling. The lead company, Rosetta, didn’t even include a single mention of it in their current investor presentation.
Both Rosetta and Newfield have each started a minimum eight well program on their lands to prove up this potential new discovery of the Alberta Basin Bakken. And they are finding oil. While none of the companies has yet issued an IP rate, Rosetta management has estimated there is between 12.5 million and 15.3 million barrels of oil equivalent in place (this means oil and gas) per square mile.
The companies are now drilling lower cost vertical wells, trying to determine where the sweet spots are in the various formations in the Alberta Bakken, where they would drill a more expensive horizontal well. The market won’t likely see an IP rate until they have drilled several horizontals, and have 30 days production behind them.
An IP rate from any of the producers would be a major catalyst for the entire play.
And the analysts are watching. Global Hunter Securities said that investors in Rosetta, even with a $1 billion market cap, “should get rewarded,” with success at the Alberta Bakken Basin. Clarus Securities have added Primary to their “Energy Watch List”.
The Alberta Bakken could also be a multi-zone play, which would increase economics. Rosetta is targeting the Bakken, Three Forks, Lodgepole and Nisku formations. The play also stretches up into Alberta. The most recent land sale on September 01, 2010 in the Del Bonita area along the Alberta Montana border brought in roughly $40 million for the sale of 50,000 acres, with the highest price of over $4200 per hectare or $1700/ac for leases along the border and inside the Bakken fairway.
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The Bakken oil play is already one of the largest onshore oil discoveries in North America in decades.
But producers in both Canada and the U.S. are still pushing out the “generally accepted” boundaries of the play – mostly to the west, into Alberta and into Montana from North Dakota – even as far as western Montana.
Rosetta Resources (NASDAQ: ROSE), Newfield (NYSE: NFX) and Quicksilver (NYSE: KWK) have all pushed the boundaries of what is known to be productive Bakken land – theirs is in northwestern Montana, right up against the Alberta border, in what is known as the Alberta Basin Bakken play.
Not only is their land far west of all the development activity in North Dakota, it is also outside the six assessment units that the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) designated when it conducted the assessment of the Bakken Formation, Williston Basin Province as late as 2008.(1)
These producers have established big land positions in the Alberta Bakken play of 100,000 – 300,000 acres each in Montana.
And a land position that size in this very young play has the ability to make a tangible difference in production- and potentially stock price- for three large U.S. producers – Rosetta Resources (ROSE: 286,000 net acres), Newfield Exploration (NFX: 224,000 net acres) and Quicksilver Resources (KWK: 130,000 net acres).
A fourth NYSE-listed producer, Murphy Oil Corporation (NYSE: MUR) also recently announced a large, 200 section (130,000 acre) land position in the area.
There are few juniors in the play. Canada’s Primary Petroleum (PIE-TSXv) is the leading junior with 127,000 acres, but Bowood Energy (BWD-TSXv), Mountainview Energy (MVW-TSXv) and Covenant Resources (CVA-TSXv) are also there, with smaller land positions.
None of the big three producers in the play talk much about the Alberta Bakken, as the play is called (even in Montana) on their website or in their literature. These companies are continually acquiring more land, although they are drilling. The lead company, Rosetta, didn’t even include a single mention of it in their current investor presentation.
Both Rosetta and Newfield have each started a minimum eight well program on their lands to prove up this potential new discovery of the Alberta Basin Bakken. And they are finding oil. While none of the companies has yet issued an IP rate, Rosetta management has estimated there is between 12.5 million and 15.3 million barrels of oil equivalent in place (this means oil and gas) per square mile.
The companies are now drilling lower cost vertical wells, trying to determine where the sweet spots are in the various formations in the Alberta Bakken, where they would drill a more expensive horizontal well. The market won’t likely see an IP rate until they have drilled several horizontals, and have 30 days production behind them.
An IP rate from any of the producers would be a major catalyst for the entire play.
And the analysts are watching. Global Hunter Securities said that investors in Rosetta, even with a $1 billion market cap, “should get rewarded,” with success at the Alberta Bakken Basin. Clarus Securities have added Primary to their “Energy Watch List”.
The Alberta Bakken could also be a multi-zone play, which would increase economics. Rosetta is targeting the Bakken, Three Forks, Lodgepole and Nisku formations. The play also stretches up into Alberta. The most recent land sale on September 01, 2010 in the Del Bonita area along the Alberta Montana border brought in roughly $40 million for the sale of 50,000 acres, with the highest price of over $4200 per hectare or $1700/ac for leases along the border and inside the Bakken fairway.