Thursday, December 10, 2015

Billions of barrels of oil vanish in a puff of accounting smoke

Billions of barrels of oil vanish in a puff of accounting smoke

[NEW YORK] In an instant, Chesapeake Energy Corp will erase the equivalent of 1.1 billion barrels of oil from its books.  Across the American shale patch, companies are being forced to square their reported oil reserves with hard economic reality.
After lobbying for rules that let them claim their vast underground potential at the start of the boom, they must now acknowledge what their investors already know: many prospective wells would lose money with oil hovering below US$40 a barrel.
Companies such as Chesapeake, founded by fracking pioneer Aubrey McClendon, pushed the Securities and Exchange Commission for an accounting change in 2009 that made it easier to claim reserves from wells that wouldn't be drilled for years. Inventories almost doubled and investors poured money into the shale boom, enticed by near-bottomless prospects.
But the rule has a catch. It requires that the undrilled wells be profitable at a price determined by an SEC formula, and they must be drilled within five years.
Time is up, prices are down, and the rule is about to wipe out billions of barrels of shale drillers' reserves. The reckoning is coming in the next few months, when the companies report 2015 figures.
"There was too much optimism built into their forecasts," said David Hughes, a fellow at the Post Carbon Institute and formerly a scientist with the Geological Survey of Canada.
"It was a great game while it lasted."
The rule change will cut Chesapeake's inventory by 45 per cent, regulatory filings show. Chesapeake's additional discoveries and expansions will offset some of its revisions, the company said in a third-quarter regulatory filing. Gordon Pennoyer, a spokesman for Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake, declined to comment further.
Other examples include Denver-based Bill Barrett Corp, which will lose as much as 40 per cent, and Oasis Petroleum Inc., based in Houston, which will erase 33 per cent, according to filings. Larry Busnardo, a Bill Barrett spokesman, declined to comment. Richard Robuck of Oasis didn't respond to questions.
The US shale revolution, which brought the country closer to energy self-sufficiency than at any time since the 1980s, was built on money borrowed against the promises of future output. New wells that could be drilled when U.S. oil was selling for US$95 a barrel - last year's price as calculated by the SEC's formula - simply don't pay at today's prices, and the revolution has stalled.
UNDRILLED PROPERTIES
When fracking advocates lobbied the SEC, they argued that hydraulic fracturing was a new technology that unlocked oil and gas in vast layers of underground rock, making drilling more predictable that it used to be.
Drillers met the rule's profitability provision last year due to a quirk in the SEC's pricing formula. The agency's yardstick is an average of the prices on the first day of each month during the calendar year. The price came to US$95 a barrel at the end of 2014, even though oil was trading below US$50 by the time the companies reported reserves in February and March. The 2015 average, including the Dec 1 price, comes out to US$51 a barrel.
"They got such a break with the price for last year, but it sure as hell isn't going to happen this year," said Ed Hirs, a managing director at Houston-based Hillhouse Resources, an independent energy company.
PROVEN RESERVES
The wells that exist only on paper are particularly vulnerable to revision. And thanks to the SEC rule change, companies have a lot more undeveloped reserves on their books than they used to.
Undeveloped reserves of oil and natural gas liquids have more than tripled to 6.1 billion barrels since 2008, the last year before the rule went into effect, according to data compiled by Bloomberg on 40 independent US producers. Undrilled wells account for 45 per cent of proven reserves, up from 30 per cent in 2008.
Writedowns, which are reported on a quarterly basis, point to sizable revisions. The 61 companies in the Bloomberg North American Independent Explorers and Producers index have announced impairments of US$143.8 billion in the past year.
Some of the wells may never be drilled, while others may return to inventories if prices rise. A company's deletions may be offset by the addition of new prospects, purchased properties or an increase in the estimated amount of crude each well will produce.
"The question is, how are these reserves going to come back?" said Subash Chandra, an energy analyst with Guggenheim Securities in New York. "Because if you have to spend within cash flow, those reserves aren't coming back. Not unless we get a spike in prices, or we return to levered growth."
BLOOMBERG

China to launch yuan gold benchmark in April: sources

China to launch yuan gold benchmark in April: sources

[SINGAPORE] China has delayed the launch of its yuan-denominated gold benchmark on the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) to next year, two sources familiar with the matter said.
The yuan price fix would mark one of China's biggest steps so far towards capitalising on its position as the world's top producer and consumer of gold. State-run SGE had initially planned to launch the benchmark by the end of this year but it will now be launched in April.
The reason for the delay was not immediately clear. The exchange was without a chairman for nearly six months, before it named a central bank official as the head of the bourse in late October. "It will start in April with Chinese banks and some foreign banks," said a source with a local bank that imports gold. "Jewellers, miners and banks could use this price as a benchmark." The SGE was not immediately available for comment.
China thinks its market weight should entitle it to be a price-setter for bullion, and market reforms have been gathering pace over the last two years. China allowed foreign banks to trade other yuan-denominated gold contracts on the SGE for the first time last year and also granted them import licenses.
A yuan fix would not be seen as an immediate threat to the gold pricing dominance of London and New York, but it could ultimately give Asia more power, particularly if China's currency becomes fully convertible.
Once launched, the Chinese benchmark's success would depend on the participation of foreign banks, which may be reluctant to join given the scrutiny of global benchmarks following the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate (Libor).
Sources have earlier told Reuters that the yuan benchmark would be derived from a 1 kilogramme contract to be traded on the SGE for a few minutes each day, with the exchange acting as the central counterparty.
REUTERS

Crude production rose to three-year high in November: Opec

Crude production rose to three-year high in November: Opec

[LONDON] Opec raised crude output to the highest in more than three years as it pressed on with a strategy to protect market share and pressure competing producers.
Output from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries rose by 230,100 barrels a day in November to 31.695 million a day, the highest since April 2012, as surging Iraqi volumes more than offset a slight pullback in Saudi Arabia. The organization is pumping about 900,000 barrels a day more than it anticipates will be needed next year.
Benchmark Brent crude dropped to a six-year low in London this week after Opec effectively scrapped its output ceiling at a Dec 4 meeting as de facto leader Saudi Arabia stuck to a policy of squeezing out rival producers. Members can pump as much as they please, despite a global surplus, Iran's Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said after the conference. Brent futures traded near US$40 a barrel in London on Thursday.
Non-Opec supply will fall by 380,000 barrels a day next year, averaging 57.14 million a day, with an expected contraction in the US accounting for roughly half the drop, the organization said Thursday in its monthly report. It increased estimates for non-Opec supply in 2015 by 280,000 barrels a day.
The group maintained projections for the amount of crude it will need to pump next year at 30.8 million barrels a day.
Iraqi production increased by 247,500 barrels a day to 4.3 million a day last month, according to external sources cited by the report, which didn't give a reason for the gain.
Iraq has pushed output to record levels this year as international companies develop fields in the south, while the semi-autonomous Kurdish region increases independent sales in the north, according to the International Energy Agency. Production had dipped in October as storms delayed southern loadings and as flows through the northern pipeline were disrupted, according to Iraq's Oil Ministry.
Production in Saudi Arabia slipped by 25,200 barrels a day to 10.13 million a day in November, Opec's report showed.
The report didn't make any reference to how Opec's data will re-incorporate output from Indonesia, which rejoined the organization on Dec 4 after an absence of seven years.
BLOOMBERG

Chinese investors warm to foreign stocks to shelter from local chill

Chinese investors warm to foreign stocks to shelter from local chill

[SHANGHAI] It has taken a slump in the property market, a white-knuckle ride on local shares and a currency devaluation, but China's retail investors are finally taking a serious look at overseas stocks and bonds.
That is music to the ears of foreign brokers and wealth managers and to local entrepreneurs who can make a profit on their coat tails, for the sums involved could be vast.
Investment bank CICC says China's high net-worth individuals control US$4.4 trillion in assets, but allocate only 5 per cent of their wealth overseas, compared with a global average of 24 per cent, and ordinary middle-class savers hold further trillions on deposit in Chinese banks.
If both groups reallocate their assets in line with global norms, some fund managers say as much as US$6 trillion of Chinese money could find its way into overseas stock and bonds.
Money is already leaving China, especially after a summer stock market crash and August's devaluation of the yuan. In November China's foreign exchange reserves drained by their third-sharpest rate ever to their lowest level since early 2013.
Official figures don't distinguish between retail and institutional investment, but Chinese purchases of offshore debt and equities rose a hefty 11 per cent in the second quarter.
And they don't capture reallocations from existing offshore portfolios including real estate, home to many billions of dollars of Chinese money.
Domestic fund managers say growing interest in a scheme that lets local mutual funds invest in offshore assets is revealing.
The Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) scheme had failed for years to attract much interest from Chinese until this year, when institutions started bidding up the price of the scheme's investment quotas traded between them. "QDII quota suddenly became very expensive this year," said Shen Weizheng, fund manager at Shanghai-based Ivy Capital, who plans to launch a Hong Kong bond fund to meet rising demand for overseas assets from mainland clients. "Domestic capital is rushing out as the yuan is no longer firm," he added.
David Friedland, manager of Asia Pacific operations for trading platform Interactive Brokers, which has offices in Hong Kong and China, said increasingly sophisticated Chinese investors were looking overseas. "We're seeing a good chunk of interest. People can't just put all their money into apartments," he said.
BUBBLE RISK
Brian Qian, a 33-year-old risk controller at a Chinese bank, fits the profile of this new breed of investors.
He said he had invested several million yuan, half his investable wealth, into overseas stocks and bonds this year. "Investment returns in China are much lower than previously," he said, and he no longer trusted the local stock markets after the summer crash, nor China's risky high-yield wealth management products (WMP). "From my perspective, there's a relatively big bubble in China's real economy," he added.
A middle-class Shanghai investor who gave her surname as Zhang said she, too, was looking at dollar assets. "A financial crisis is coming to China, and the currency is going to depreciate. It is not safe to give my money to Chinese banks or asset management products any more." This growing distaste for local assets, beset with bubbles, market distortions and shadowy underground banking products, is balanced by steadier returns from overseas markets.
The S&P 500 index of big US shares is up 35 per cent from its peak before the global financial crisis, while the Shanghai Composite Index is still down over 40 per cent.
Chinese businesses are gearing up to help those looking to make the switch in what Dacheng Fund Management Co calls the "trend of the next decade".
It is building a dedicated investment team to help Chinese invest overseas.
Former Wall Street trader Liu Zhen is now CEO of Clipper Advisors, a software start-up whose Blue Sea Wealth cellphone app is specifically tailored to help Chinese investors navigate offshore exchange-traded funds, reallocating according to risk tolerance and goals. "For every Chinese person there are two pockets, one with dollars, one with renminbi," he said.
The problem for many such investors is not working out what to invest in but how.
Officially, there is a US$50,000 annual limit on individuals'moving money out of China, though many have found ways round that to invest in overseas property.
Wary of the economic impact of outflows when growth is slowing, Beijing has been making it harder to get money out, freezing further QDII quota approvals since March and suspending applications for a yuan-denominated version of the scheme as recently as Wednesday.
That's a headache for people like Liu Haiying, Chairman of Haiying (Shanghai) Investment Consulting Co. "I have a plan to launch a global macro hedge fund to invest in global financial assets," said Liu. "There's huge demand for such products. The biggest obstacle now is how to move the money out."
REUTERS

Singapore bourse targets errant Chinese firms in bid to boost governance

Singapore bourse targets errant Chinese firms in bid to boost governance

[SINGAPORE] Chinese companies on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) are facing extra scrutiny from the bourse as its new management attempts to improve corporate governance that could help boost flagging volumes and revive listings.
With the mid-year appointments of a new CEO and a former white-collar crime police chief as its top regulatory officer, and armed with enhanced regulatory powers since October, SGX is focusing on so-called 'S-chips' for problems such as questionable accounting and inadequate disclosures, and has vowed to whip them into shape.
A review by Reuters of regulatory filings showed that more than 40 per cent of SGX's queries so far in 2015 were directed at Chinese companies, even though they only make up 16 per cent of the 771 firms listed on the exchange.
The focus on governance reflects SGX's attempt to bolster its reputation as a tough front-line regulator amid an outcry by investors suffering from the blowup of some S-chips. The move could help the exchange, whose revenue from the securities business has fallen for two straight years. "The real issue for SGX, and the investing community here, is the very negative sentiment around S-chips. If SGX wants to attract more (good quality) listings from China, it needs to address this perception," said David Smith, head of corporate governance at Aberdeen Asset Management Asia, which owns SGX shares.
SGX's reputation took a hit after several Chinese companies were embroiled in accounting scandals in 2008 and 2011. A group of non-Chinese companies suffered a market crash in 2013 that wiped out billions of dollars of market capitalisation within days, further dampening trading interest on the market.
As a result, Southeast Asia's biggest bourse has seen daily average trading value in the 2015 financial year that ended on June 30 fall to its lowest since 2006.
SGX attracted just one listing on its main board for calendar year 2015. The $322 million raised through initial public offerings in Singapore so far this year is just 1.5 per cent of what Hong Kong has raised in the same period, Thomson Reuters data showed.
NEW PRIORITY New CEO Loh Boon Chye and regulatory officer Tan Boon Gin have made cleaning up the house a priority.
Tan detailed puzzling accounting in some S-chips in a column posted last month, a highly unusual move aimed at signalling the SGX's focus on quality of accounts of listed companies.
"We are highlighting a trend we have observed based on publicly disclosed information," Tan told Reuters in an email. "Enforcement powers under SGX's rules were recently strengthened. These enforcement powers will be used where necessary," he said.
The SGX has taken disciplinary actions, including reprimands, fines and warnings, against eight companies or individuals in 2015, making this year the busiest for regulatory action since 2011. "I've never seen so much focus on regulatory initiatives and action over such a short period," said Mak Yuen Teen, associate professor at the National University of Singapore. "Hopefully SGX is realising that investor protection must be the first consideration in building any strong capital market."
REUTERS

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