Monday, April 21, 2008

Gazprom: Favored to Win a Majority of Russia's Future Oil and Gas Projects

Newly elected Russian president Dmitry Medvedev is currently serving as Gazprom's (ADR: OGZPY) Chairman of the Board, and while Medvedev has served as Chairman of Gazprom prior to his election as President in March of 2008, the continued service of Medvedev appears to be an official endorsement (to say the least) for Gazprom's domestic position in terms of future hydrocarbon acquisitions.

Medvedev made statements in the past - - in mid 2007-- that Gazprom should be worth over $US1Trillion in terms of market capitalization -- currently Gazprom is worth approximately $US315Bn, which is approximately 13x estimated 2007 earnings. As Russia is the world's largest natural gas producer, with Gazprom producing approximately 90% of Russia's production, the current market value of $US315Bn is not excessive by any valuation measure.

Future Acquisition of Russian Gas and Oil Assets Likely to go to Gazprom:

It is probable that most new discoveries in Russia in both oil and gas will go to as a first priority to Gazprom, instead of its rival state owned firm, Rosneft, or privately owned Russian firms such as Lukoil. The intelligence consultancy Stratfor has commented in the past on Gazprom and Rosneft (Russian state owned oil firm)'s rivalry in terms of gaining oil producing assets (articles here and here). With Medvedev in power, the balance appears to shift to Gazprom verses Rosneft -- as analyzed by Stratfor in January of 2008.

Recently Gazprom has been moving to acquire assets from on TNK-BP, Russia's #4 oil producer, signing an agreement to buy its newly acquired Kovyka gas field for a below market value of $1Bn. It should be noted that TNK-BP is a huge oil producer, even as only Russia's #4 oil firm, producing approximately 1.4 million barrels per day of oil (out of a world's average of approximately 83 million barrels per day of oil). Russia is essentially even with Saudi Arabia in terms of daily oil production, sharing the top spot as the world's largest oil producer -- as both Saudi Arabia and Russia producing between 9 and 10 million barrels per day of oil. Much of Russia remains underexplored and as such, future reserve additions to Gazprom going forward appear very promising.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Sinopec 2007 Results

Sinopec (SNP) announced 2007 year end results on April 6, 2008 with overall earnings up 5.5% to RMB 58.7Bn. In terms of segment results, most notable was the fact that SNP's Exploration & Production division's operating profits were lower by 22.8% to RMB 48.7Bn, even though oil output was up 2.3% y/y and natural gas output was up 10.2% y/y. This result is assessed to be mainly due to one time charges and events -- mainly due to a lower than market realized price for oil and higher depreciation charges -- that are not expected to negatively impact higher expected E&P segment earnings going forward with the realization of higher oil prices.

Chart 1: Sinopec Key 2007 Financial and Operating Results


2007

% Change

Sinopec Earnings RMB Bn

58.7

5.50%

Segment Operating Income: (RMB Bn)



Exploration & Production

48.6

-22.80%

Refining

-13.66

n/a

Marketing

33.6

18.20%

Chemical

13.4

-8.00%

Operating Statistics:



Oil Produced mm bbl

291.7

2.30%

Gas Produced bcm

8.06

10.20%

Exploration Expense RMB Bn

11.1

39.10%

Crude Processed mn/d day

3.13

6.30%


Brief Commentary on SNP's Refining and Marketing Divisions:

Sinopec Marketing boasted higher profits, driven by expansion in the Marketing division's number of outlets and volumes of product sold, and in the case of the Refining segment, lower losses due to the higher average prices of gasoline in China for most of 2007 verses the world oil price. Sinopec's Marketing division is expected to have a record year in 2008 even as Sinopec's refining segment is expected to post pre-subsidy losses (Sinopec's forecasted refining losses are the subject of this previous article).

E&P Division: Received a Lower than Market Price for Oil in 2007

Sinopec did not receive a significantly higher oil price during the fourth quarter -- Sinopec's E&P division's overall realized oil price during the full year was approximately 3.1% lower in 2007 than in 2006. The rise in the oil price during 2007 mainly occurred in the 4th quarter of 2007, as shown in chart 2 below:

Chart 2: Increase in World Oil Price in 2007:

The rapid rise in the oil price during the 4th quarter of 2007 meant that Sinopec's short term contracts for oil sale resulted in a significantly lower realized oil price for the year.
Note that going forward, Sinopec should expect to realize higher oil prices as long as oil prices continue to remain elevated as contracts reprice based on market levels, which should more than offset the higher costs associated with extracting oil and gas as E&P divisions generally receive higher revenue proportionally with higher oil prices verses costs.

Sinopec's E&P's Division: 2007 Deprecation Charges:

Sinopec recorded one-time non-cash depreciation charges of RMB5.3Bn in the 2007 in Sinopec's E&P division, which would have comprised an estimated 37% of the drop in Sinopec 2007 E&P income (reference: see page 28 of Sinopec's 2007 Annual Report (large pdf warning).

Why was there a large increase in deprecation charges during the 4Q07 at Sinopec? Under successful efforts accounting rules for oil and gas properties, future costs of extracting oil and natural gas over the life of a company's existing oil and gas fields are estimated based on current costs, and a charge is taken if the extraction costs during the current year have risen (reference, see Section 3 under the Full Cost Method of this University of Cincinnati accounting guide)(Note that Sinopec uses Successful efforts accounting vs Full Cost, but the amortization charges for higher future costs is similar under both accounting methods). As extraction costs rose for Sinopec during 2007, due to high inflation in drilling, materials, labor, etc, an increase in deprecation as defined as for extraction costs for all future years was recorded in 2007. Note that Exxon and BP and most oil firms, for example, took higher oil and gas extraction deprecation charges in 2007 -- Exxon and BP took higher deprecation charges of approximately $US800M and $US1.2Bn in 2007, respectively. As Sinopec currently produces a higher percentage of its reserve base each year -- ie Sinopec's reserve life is lower than Exxon and BP's reserve lives -- Sinopec's depreciation charge impacted its earnings to a higher degree. Note however that Exxon and BP's E&P segments did not perform extremely well in 2007 due to the same drivers that drove (temporary) lower operating profit performance in Sinopec's results, which will be explored below.

How Did Other Integrated Major's E&P Segments Perform in 2007?

Overall, the Integrated Major E&P divisions did not perform strongly as a group in 2007 in terms of operating income and production, mainly due to higher depreciation charges due to higher lifting costs, and lack of realization of higher oil prices as shown in the chart below. It is also noted that oil production (excluding natural gas production) was not strong for the Integrated Oil major universe in 2007 as a whole -- Sinopec's results of +2.3% for oil production growth actually placed it in the higher half of production growth for integrated majors. However, note as the realized price continues to stabilize at a higher level in 2008, reported earnings should be stronger in 2008 verses 2007 for the Integrated major's E&P divisions as a whole.

Chart 3: Selected Integrated Majors' 2007 E&P Segment Key Operating Metrics

in $US Bn

2007

% Change

Exxon Mobil



E&P Operating Income

26.497

1.01%

E&P Depreciation

12.25

7.30%

Oil Liquids Production*

2.6 mbpd

-1.90%




BP plc



E&P Operating Income

26.938

-10.10%

E&P Depreciation

7.72

18.20%

Oil Liquids Production*

2.5 mbpd

-2.10%




Royal Dutch Shell



E&P Operating Income

14.686

1.00%

E&P Depreciation

9.338

7.70%

Oil Liquids Production*

1.8 mbpd

-6.70%




Conoco Philips



E&P Operating Income**

4.615

-53.40%

E&P Depreciation

8.298

13.90%

Oil Liquids Production*

0.854 mbpd

-12.10%




Chevron



E&P Operating Income

14.816

12.70%

E&P Depreciation

8.708

16.01%

Oil Liquids Production*

1.7 mbpd

0.08%




Total



E&P Operating Income

29.26

-3.89%

E&P Depreciation

8.14

7.30%

Oil Liquids Production*

1.2 mbpd

2.30%




Sinopec



E&P Operating Income

6.59

-22.80%

E&P Deprecation:

2.45

40.60%

Oil Liquids Production*

0.8 mbpd

2.30%

* "Oil Liquids Production" is defined as oil and natural gas liquids production, and excludes natural gas production
** Conoco Philips recorded a write down of their Venezuelian assets in 2007, which was the main driver of COP's lower E&P Operating Income

Note: Other SNP E&P Division Costs: Dry Hole Costs and Special Taxes Are Not Expected to Significantly Impact Sinopec's Earnings Going Forward:

Higher exploration expenses, in particular, dry hole expenses -- defined as drilling that did not result in economic quantities of oil and gas) of RMB 3.1Bn, higher general costs in the E&P division of RMB3.6Bn y/y and higher special oil taxes of RMB 2.5Bn y/y also accounted for the change in 2007 E&P earnings (note that the special oil tax are mainly enacted by the Chinese central government to gain revenue to repay subsidies to Sinopec's refining division, so can be viewed as a realignment of revenue). Dry hole expenses -- costs associated with unsuccessful drilling -- are not high for a large integrated oil major, as for example, Chevron announced dry hole expenses of $US507M in 2007 (equivalent to approximately RMB 3.8Bn). Note that Sinopec still has not reported its massive Puguang Gas field in its reserves statement, so drilling and exploration costs associated with this field can be capitalized in 2008 -- the dry hole expense indicates that outside of Puguang, several wells drilled in 2007 were unsuccessful. Note that Sinopec's dry hole expenses a Drilling in 2008 with the Puguang field will be reported as more successful. But overall, in assessing the cost and revenue drivers of lower income, the largest contributor of the lower E&P division's operating performance is assessed to be the lower realized oil price.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Notes on Alternative Energy

Most analysts expect alternative energy to continue to attract significant capital going forward -- one example of this forecast is the 2008 Prediction of Venture Capital Trends by the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). The question comes to mind: how is alternative energy defined? A definition search on Google provides several definitions, most of which define alternative energy by energy source. Below is a simple chart on alternative energy based on source for the benefit of interested readers.


The key to the chart is -- in the author's opinion -- **very promising * somewhat promising "?" not enough information "??" skeptical and ___ (underlined) don't believe will work, as defined as a positive return on energy invested by source and initiative. Rational for the author's opinions are not presented (perhaps will be presented in future posts). There are a few firms listed under each category but these lists are very incomplete.

A few notes on the overall alternative energy industry: first, detailed projections are very important in assessing the economics of each initiative. For example, in the book Wind Power by Paul Gripe -- 700+ pages on wind energy (and extremely interesting reading) -- much of the viability of wind power is expressed location by location, dependent on multi-year assessments of wind patterns and cost drivers. This sort of analysis does not translate easily into a short article in a newspaper or magazine.

Second, in all areas of the chart above, -- somewhat related to the first point concerning projections -- the initiatives have relatively high capital costs. Many power initiatives are described in investor prospectuses as "cost per MW:"" -- with $1000 per MW as a very economical standard for a large scale power plant. This cost translates to a billion dollars for a 1000MW power plant in coal, solar, nuclear, etc.

Lastly, the timing of the ideas appears to be generally of a longer time frame than is customary in information technology and other venture capital business areas - for example, in Nuclear technology, according to the publication Nuclear Engineering International: "2020 is right around the corner" (written in early 2008).

Friday, April 4, 2008

Gauging Sinopec's Refining Losses

Losses at Sinopec's refining division have been driven by the high world market price of oil and a fixed price for gasoline within the domestic Chinese market. It is noted that Sinopec presents its financial results in an unusual manner -- reporting its refining activities in a separate division from its marketing (gasoline stations and pipelines) activities, in an apparent effort to show losses, in order -- it is argued here -- to influence China's Ministry of Finance for direct subsidies and China's central government for price increases in the domestic price of gasoline. If Sinopec's refining and marketing divisions were kept together, the company would not have shown losses in this division in any year since 1997, without subsidies (up until 2006, the last date for which year end segment data is available). Future increases in the world price of oil is likely to be met with some increases in the Chinese domestic price of gasoline -- according to statements from China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) -- leading to most likely manageable losses at Sinopec's refining division. Future higher world prices for oil and natural gas will benefit Sinopec's underestimated and rapidly growing Exploration and Production division.

Sinopec Segment Analysis:

Sinopec has been historically consistently profitable in all divisions except for refining. Sinopec for financial reporting divides its overall operations into 4 divisions:

1. Exploration & Production -- ownership and production of reserves of oil and natural gas,
2. Refining -- large scale chemical conversion of crude oil to premium petroleum products,
3. Marketing --operation gas stations and pipelines and
4. Chemicals -- production of petrochemicals from oil and natural gas feedstocks.

Note that Sinopec's largest division by profitability is its E&P Division -- as is the case with almost all integrated majors -- by operating profits, which accounted for approximately 75% of operating profit in 2006 (the last date for which information is available as of early 4/08). It is generally standard practice within the integrated oil universe to present financial results in three segments, with refining and marketed combined -- for example, Exxon Mobil reported its 2007 results by segment in as "Upstream" (E&P), Downstream (refining and marketing and pipelines) and "Chemicals." Further, Sinopec's domestic rival firm, PetroChina, combines its Refining and Marketing divisions for financial reporting purposes -- and has not shown a loss in its Refining and Marketing division up until 2006 and has not received state subsidies for refining. The following chart shows division operating profit, without subsidies, for Sinopec's reporting divisions as far back as 1997 (note that at the date of the writing of this article (4/08), the 2007 20-F for Sinopec is not available, so up to 2006 data is shown only).

Chart 1:


Source: Sinopec Annual Reports Note: segment operating profit does not include state subsidies of RMB 10Bn in 2005 and RMB 5Bn in 2006 to SNP's refining division

The chart above with reported Sinopec financial statements looks alarming in terms of losses in the refining division, however, if refining and marketing are included in one segment, Sinopec has not reported losses in the the refining and marketing division since 1997, as shown in the chart below:

Chart 2:


Note: Results above are presented without state subsidies of RMB 10Bn in 2005 and RMB 5Bn in 2006 -- and an estimated RMB 12.5Bn in 2007 (as segment data for Sinopec is not available at the date of this writing).

Chart 2 above shows several interesting facts. First, losses in Sinopec's refining and marketing division have not historically occurred, despite several media reports within China and outside of China that have predicted that refining losses would "wipe out profits for Sinopec as a whole." These reports predict future losses for Sinopec, -- not historical -- so future losses will be analyzed in the next section. As a second interesting fact, it is noted above that Sinopec's Exploration & Production division is the major source of operating profits and value for the firm as a whole. It would not be too far off in the author's opinion to state the following: interested investors in Sinopec should review SNP's Exploration & Production division first and foremost with regards to future valuation, and significantly subordinate in terms of profitability or potential losses Sinopec's refining and marketing and chemical divisions.

Estimates of Future -- 2008 and Onward -- Losses in Sinopec's Refining Division:

Goldman Sachs Sinopec Analyst analyst Kelvin Koh in a March 17, 2008 report titled: "China Petroleum and Chemical: How Bad is the Refining Squeeze?" forecasted losses of RMB 20Bn for Sinopec's refining division in 2008, after subsidies of RMB 25Bn -- so total refining losses of RMB 45Bn. Koh estimates that Sinopec's refining division lost between RMB 17.8Bn and RMB 18.4Bn in the first quarter of 2008, partially offset by approximately RMB 7.4Bn of subsidies in the first quarter of 2007. The report did not mention Sinopec's marketing division or provide segment calculations -- and did not mention potentially offsetting profitability at Sinopec's Marketing segment.

Sinopec has publicly renounced statements that it its refining segment would suffer huge losses with high oil prices -- these reports have been driven by Sinopec Vice Chairman Zhou Yuan's comments on March 7, 2008 that Sinopec is losing RMB 2000 for every ton of crude oil that it refines. A simple calculation that shows that Sinopec refined approximately 150M tons of crude oil last year would result in an incredible refining loss of RMB 300 Bn for the full year 2008 at oil above $100, from Zhou Yuan's estimates, which is clearly unprecedented in Sinopec's history. Sinopec on March 14, 2008 stated that "All such information [concerning refining losses] is factually incorrect and misleading." (from Platts Commodity News, "Sinopec Refutes Report on Possible 1H 2008 Loss, March 14, 2008). However, reports of massive losses in Sinopec's refining division continue to circulate, including an article from China Knowledge Press on April 2, 2008 titled: "Sinopec's Refining Unit Suffers Huge Loss in First 2 Months" which stated Sinopec as a whole "booked an amazing loss of RMB 1.37Bn" in the first 2 months of 2008. However, Goldman Sachs analyst Koh has called these reports of overall Sinopec firm losses "factually incorrect."

Which estimate of losses for 2008 and beyond should the investor trust? As a rule, Investment Banks tend to be more well informed than other commentators, so Goldman Sachs' estimate of RMB 45Bn loss pre-subsidy to RMB 20Bn loss post subsidy is more likely to be correct than other estimates. As Goldman has not published Sinopec's Marketing division's expected profitability for 2008 to the author's knowledge, a very rough estimate will be presented here. If we assume continued operating profits in the RMB 30Bn range in 2008 as in 2006 for SNP's marketing division -- likely the profits will be higher due to expansion in the number of outlets and higher levels of product sold -- then refining and marketing combined will show a manageable loss for the year (RMB 15Bn) without subsidies and will be show a net operating profit (RMB 5Bn) with the assumed RMB 20Bn subsidies (again with the conservative assumption that marketing's operating profits do not grow year to year). Note that this calculation does not include Sinopec's E&P division, which had over RMB 60Bn in operating profit in 2006, when oil prices were at approximately $60 -- with oil prices at $100, Sinopec's E&P division's operating profits should increase substantially.

Is Sinopec at Risk due to the Fact that Sinopec's Refining Division has to Source the Majority of its Oil from Outside (non-Chinese) Sources?

Sinopec's Exploration & Production segment supplies only approximately 21% of the crude oil supplied to Sinopec's refining division -- and crude oil sourced from Chinese firms (PetroChina and CNOOC and Sinopec combined) supplied 30% of Sinopec's refining divisions throughput. However, it should be noted that this ratio of company supplied crude oil to refining products is closer to the norm than for integrated oil majors than the exception. According to Exxon Mobil's 2007 10-k, Exxon Mobil produced approximately 2.6M barrels per day of oil and natural gas liquids (excluding equity interest oil production) and refined approximately 5.7M barrels per day of crude oil, for a ratio of Company supplied crude oil of 45%. Chevron produced 460K barrels per day in 2007 of crude oil and refined approximately 1.8M barrels per day of oil, translating to a ratio of company supplied oil of approximately 26%.

Company

Company Supplied Oil to Refining Segment*

Petrobras

110%

PetroChina

106%

BP

87%

Exxon Mobil

45%

Chevron

26%

Sinopec

21%

Conoco Philips

14%

Royal Dutch Shell

10%

* This ratio is calculated as the crude oil and liquids production of the company -- excluding natural gas production -- divided by the company's refining throughput for the last reported financial year

It is standard practice in the oil industry that Exploration & Production divisions are segregated from refining divisions for financial reporting purposes and refining divisions are charged a market price for oil, even if the oil is sourced from the parent company's E&P division. As such, the exploration & production division of any oil major should report record profits with higher oil prices, regardless of how the refining and marketing segments perform. If there is a higher ratio of non-parent Company sourced oil, losses in the refining division could more than offset overall company profitability. (note that this fact stresses that a large exploration and production division is the key indicator of a profitable integrated oil major). One could paraphrase, that a larger ratio in Chart 3 above shows that the respective integrated majors have higher percentages of revenues and income from their E&P divisions verses their downstream divisions.

In the case of Sinopec, the potential for losses in refining are partially mitigated by the fact that China has been raising the price of gasoline year to year with higher oil prices, although not as high as the US and EU, but at a faster rate than Malaysia and Indonesia and several other countries. China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) released an outline in February 2007 of a more market-based formula for gasoline pricing based on a basket of international crude prices, with the aim of bringing China's domestic gasoline prices more in line with western levels. ("Outline Emerges of China's Freer Products Price Formula" 2/5/07, International Oil Daily) According to the International Oil Daily, NDRC 's process of setting gasoline prices appears to be opaque, but China appears intent on allowing continued rises in the price of gasoline going forward, in order to support its refining industries and encourage economical use of fuel, balanced with economic considerations.

Further, Sinopec is also likely to continue to subsidize Sinopec, which is the consensus view of investment banks such as UBS and Goldman. Note that many countries around the world, including Russia, many Middle Eastern countries, India, for example keep domestic gasoline prices artificially low to benefit their economies, and also have a practice of subsidizing their domestic oil refining companies.

Note: Exploration and Production is Unusually the Major Source of Value for Most Integrated Oil Companies:

Upstream divisions generally comprise the majority of profits for most integrated oil companies, and Sinopec is no different in this regard. For example, Exxon Mobil's exploration and production segment comprised 65.3% of total Exxon net income in 2007, according to Exxon's 2007 10-k. It is argued here that Sinopec should be viewed as an typical integrated oil major, with an emphasis on upstream assets. With this idea in mind, how attractive is Sinopec's E&P division?

Quick Overview of Sinopec's Exploration & Production Segment:

Sinopec's Exploration and Production division is large currently with 3.7Billion Barrels of proven oil and natural gas reserves (87% oil, 13% natural gas) at the end of 2006-- in comparison ConocoPhillips reported 3.1 Billion Barrels of proven reserves including affiliates at the end of 2007. Further, Sinopec's exploration and production division is likely to almost double reserves at the end of 2008 due to inclusion in SNP's reserve statement of the very large Puguang natural gas discovery in China's Sichuan province. Sinopec expects to maintain high international upstream growth in states such as Iran, Angloa, Australia and Venezuela.

The fact that Sinopec's upstream assets are sizable and likely to grow significant is probably a surprise to many investors who are not familiar with the Company. Sinopec (SNP) is commonly viewed by investors as primarily a downstream oil company, with profitability mainly dependent on refining, petrochemicals and marketing. This perception stems to a large degree from the historical (pre-1998) division of China's oil industry -- with the restructuring in 1998, Sinopec took over previously CNPC's southern oil fields, including the Shengli oil field -- the second largest oil field in China -- while CNPC took ownership of previously Sinopec's northern refining and marketing operations -- which, incidentally, were and are less efficient and technologically advanced than Sinopec's southern refining divisions.

Sinopec as mentioned in a previous article has stated that it will obtain overseas assets from its parent company, Sinopec Group -- the most attractive of these assets that is upcoming in the short to intermediate term is the Yadavarian Oil field in Iran with reserves of over 3 Billion barrels of oil, which is currently undeveloped. Sinopec is active in Angola, Venezuela and Russia, among other international locations. Further, Sinopec discovered the largest gas field in China's history, the Puguang field in Sichuan, with approximately 2-3 BBOE of natural gas, and further domestic exploration within China is promising. A fuller discussion of Sinopec's Upstream assets and prospects will be upcoming in a future article.

Conclusion:

Apprehension on the part of investors towards future losses in Sinopec's refining division has resulted in a relatively low market capitalization for Sinopec of approximately $US85Bn -- a low valuation by most measures for a major National Oil Company. It is likely that these fears are overblown due to the unusual segment reporting and also underestimation by investors of reserve and production growth at Sinopec's Exploration & Production division.