HES could fetch a substantial buyout premium from one of the supermajors if the company ever wanted to sell, IMO. However, HES has been a quasi family-run company for a long time and they may want to keep it that way. Comments welcome.
• EPS was $2.74; almost all operating profit came from upstream.
• Production declined to 399K boe/d (from 420K boe/d in 4Q10) for two reasons: i) suspension of production from the Libyan JV in which HES has an 8% stake; and ii) sale of North Sea assets announced in Apr 2010 that did not close until later in the year (#msg-48538701).
• 73% of production was oil and NGL. Of the 27% of production from NG, only 30% of that was in the US, and hence only 9% of overall production was tied to the Henry Hub price.
• HES’ forecast for 2011 full-year production (assuming no improvement in Libya) is 485-495K boe/d.
• Bakken production of 25K boe/d is expected to reach a run rate of 40k boe/d (~10% of overall production) by the end of 2011 (#msg-56999808).
• HES’ Bakken oil is now getting a $3 premium to the WTI price; previously, this oil sold at a $3.50-4 discount to WTI due to the remote location (#msg-56596659). No reason was cited for the abrupt change in Bakken pricing—comments?
• (Opinion only): HES has considerable buyout vig, as noted in #msg-57036532.