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Sunday, March 18, 2007 8:17:54 PM
Chicago/oslo: The professionals most familiar with the so-called oil shortage know there is an estimated 3tn barrels under land and sea. That is why they are making their biggest bets in drilling rigs where the scarcity is no illusion.
Oil drillers “are the most attractive way to go,” said Don Hodges, who holds about 160,000 shares of Transocean Inc and about 120,000 shares of GlobalSantaFe Corp among the $1.1bn managed by Dallas-based Hodges Capital Management. “There is a shortage, it takes time to build one and it takes a lot of money. Their earnings are going to go up every year for the foreseeable future.”
Orders for offshore rigs have surged sixfold in the past five years, and rental rates are at the highest ever after oil prices tripled and industry profits soared. The wait for the most sophisticated rigs, which can drill in waters more than a mile deep, is a record three years, and the cost to lease one has quadrupled since 2004, climbing to more than $500,000 a day.
“It’s a big problem,” Ashley Heppenstall, chief executive officer of Stockholm-based oil producer Lundin Petroleum AB, said in an interview. “There has been a gross underinvestment in the industry for a number of years and we paid for that last year. We had delays in some of our drilling campaigns.”
Lundin plans to sink wells this year in Norway, Russia and Sudan, and has permits to explore in Vietnam, Ethiopia and Congo.
ExxonMobil Corp, BP and the rest of the largest oil producers are being forced to pay more to get the rigs they need to meet the world’s ever-rising energy demand.
With crude prices above $50 for most of the past two years, investors from Boone Pickens to billionaire John Fredriksen, who controls the world’s largest oil tanker company, are betting on drilling companies to outperform producers.
“We think drilling companies are going to stay very busy,” hedge fund manager Pickens, who is sticking to his prediction that oil prices will reach $70 a barrel this year, said in an interview Qatar last month. The situation for drillers is “very positive for profitability,” he said.
The rise in rig costs contributed to the five-year jump in oil prices by driving up production costs, hindering the discovery of new deposits and slowing the development of existing finds. There is some 3.02tn barrels of crude oil left under the ground, according to the US Geological Survey.
The oil left underground in the US alone is enough to replace every barrel pumped from Iran for the next 20 years, according to statistics compiled by London-based BP, Europe’s second-biggest oil company.
A new deepwater rig that is capable of drilling in waters 7,500ft or more costs $525mn to $625mn to build, up from $300mn to $400mn during the late 1990s, according to the Dallas-based analyst.
The shares of drillers are poised to replace oil and gas producers as the industry leaders, Hodges said. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Oil & Gas Drilling Index, which includes Transocean, Noble Corp and Dallas-based Ensco International Inc, is little changed in the past year.
A measure grouping producers such as ExxonMobil and Chevron Corp, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Integrated Oil & Gas Index, jumped 22% in that time. The losers are smaller companies that sink wildcat wells in hopes of finding a gusher.
Desire Petroleum, a UK-based oil explorer with a permit to drill offshore the Falkland Islands near Argentina, has sought a rig since early 2005. The firm lost £1.68mn ($3.3mn) in its most recent six-month period.
The rigs most in demand are known as drillships and semisubmersibles, equipment used in deep waters.
The battle for rigs has intensified as oil producers boost exploration in the Gulf of Mexico, West Africa and Brazil. The number of offshore rigs in West Africa has increased to 56 from 44 a year ago, according to industry analyst ODS-Petrodata.
In Asia and Australia, the number rose to 86 from 79. “It takes three years from when you order a rig until it is delivered, and we haven't seen this before,” said Martin Huseby Karlsen, an analyst with DnB NOR Markets in Oslo.
Lease rates have soared to a record. Seadrill Ltd, the Norwegian driller founded by Fredriksen, in January said it rented out a rig for an unprecedented $525,000 a day. Contracts in early 2004 were signed for about $125,000 a day.
“There’s a fight for resources in the entire industry, not only rigs,” Norsk Hydro chief executive officer Eivind Reiten said in an interview. “That;s putting pressure on costs, and may challenge the progress of some of the projects, but my company, Hydro, is fortunate in being well positioned there.”
Oslo-based Hydro is Norway’s second-largest oil company.
The number of offshore drilling rigs on order at shipyards, a measure of demand, has jumped to 115 from 18 five years ago, according to ODS-Petrodata. With few rigs yet delivered, the number of offshore rigs operating worldwide is little changed in the past five years, at 657.
Transocean’s net income last year was $1.39bn, up from $19.2mn in 2003. The stock more than tripled during that time. Noble’s net income jumped to $732mn in 2006 from $166.4mn in 2003.
Shares of the Sugar Land, Texas-based company doubled.
The retreat in oil prices from the record $78.40 a barrel in July poses no threat to exploration, said Alf Thorkildsen, chief financial officer for Seadrill Management AS, the Stavanger, Norway-based operating arm of Seadrill. “We’re not concerned with oil prices at around $50,” said Thorkildsen. “If they go below $30, that’s another issue.”
Seadrill is looking at buying competitors to get rigs and workers now and avoid the three-year wait. The biggest acquisition in the industry last year was when Fredriksen bought Norway’s Smedvig for $2.4bn.
Seadrill, based in Hamilton, Bermuda, beat out Noble and became the industry’s sixth-largest following the purchase. Fredriksen declined to comment for this story.
GlobalSantaFe, the world’s second-biggest offshore driller by sales, with 61 offshore rigs, would be a “perfect fit” for Seadrill, because of its “premium drilling fleet and high- quality management team,” said Alan Laws, an analyst at Merrill Lynch & Co in New York.
While oil and gas prices rise and fall, rig owners can lock in years of revenue with long-term leases. Houston-based Transocean on February 14 estimated its so-called contract backlog, or revenue expected from existing agreements, was almost $21bn for the next nine years.
Shares of rig companies are also cheaper than oil companies including ExxonMobil. Transocean trades at more than 10 times expected earnings, while Noble, the third-largest US offshore oil and gas driller, is at 8.1 times.
Irving, Texas-based ExxonMobil trades at more than 12 times expected profit. BP Capital, the Dallas hedge fund managed by Pickens, boosted stakes in oilfield services stocks including Transocean and GlobalSantaFe in the fourth quarter, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Two of the five biggest holdings in the fourth quarter at Touradji Capital Management, a hedge fund firm founded by Paul Touradji, a former commodities trader at Julian Robertson’s Tiger Management, were Diamond Offshore Drilling, an oil driller controlled by the Tisch family, and Hercules Offshore. Both of the rig owners are based in Houston.
“We’re bullish on offshore drillers,” said Maxime Carmignac, who counts Noble, GlobalSantaFe and Transocean among the $13bn in assets she helps oversee at Carmignac Gestion in Paris. “Offshore drillers are cheap, undervalued and less volatile than producers and the commodities themselves, oil and gas. They are sitting on a huge amount of cash flow and may benefit from merger and acquisition activity.”
Expectations are so high the risks from falling short are mounting. Baker Hughes on February 15 said profit rose less than predicted in the fourth quarter and will trail behind estimates in the current quarter on slowing sales growth in North America. The Houston company’s shares that day sank 9.4%, their biggest drop since 2001. – Bloomberg
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