Utilico Insights - Jacqueline Broers assesses why Vietnam could be the darling of Asia for investors. Watch the full video here.
"Unless Weir is a special manager (which I doubt) then Genel are in a lot of trouble."
Straycat, it seems you are the one predicting gloom and doom...
Genel has a net cash position of $120 million even after reducing their debt by $26 million. Their cash burn is modest and they expect to maintain a net (of debt) cash position of at least $100 million throughout 2024. Their capital structure position wouldn't appear to be materially different from GKP's. And they face the same risks and challenges...
"But, the argument of "if you cant't do it there are others who can" is a powerful one. "
So is the argument that "we'd do it if you maintain our current contract." But this is in essence the battle before the company. Existential. Can we get to a sensible contract that allows for sensible development of the field? If not it's tits up all round. That was where we were before this whole thing blew up - the self funding plan. A notion that many didn't get. I still think the current contract and previously agreed FDP will - largely - prevail but that's based on hope for commonsense and not any blind faith that "the oil will flow" or "Shaikan heavy will be in demand". Of course both will - whether it's with or without GKP is the question.
"The huge dividends paid out so far can be seen as a red rag to a bull"
I think it readily arguable that the company isn't paying out profits but rather the capital it invested and has had returned via cost recovery. For that Iraq has a producing field and all the assets needed to run it. (It would be interesting to add up all the capital deployed by this company since inception and compare it with that returned via dividends and buybacks. How much of that returned was capital versus generated free cash flow (true profit)?)
If you are confident in your belief that commonsense - and GKP - will prevail then having the company buy back and cancel 10-15% of its current shares o/s at anywhere near current prices ought to make a lot of sense to you. At an absolute minimum they should buy 8 million shares for the EBT to cover the full o/s stock options rather than issuing new shares. If they have balls and confidence, they'd do a lot more... Weatherdon didn't have any and that's why he was pushed out.
"if the self-funding model still has legs.
And I believe it does.
"
How can you? The 'self-funding model' requires a contract with sufficient cost recovery headroom to 'fit' an agreed Field Development Plan. The company isn't close to concluding either. The arguments between Erbil and the MNR about the cost of extraction are just the start of what needs to be resolved. The company needs to no longer use waste sums of its own capital to fund the field development on behalf of Iraq. That's what sent them bankrupt. Instead they need to maintain a minimal capital base, returning any excess to shareholders, and not agree to a FDP that can't fit within the contract cost recovery envelope. I'm not saying maintain zero cash, but $86 million is far too much. Nearly 30% of the current market cap is earning next to nothing. They can cut that in half without materially affecting their risk of survival.
"GKP are debt free" almost, now finally with "the payment of all remaining overdue invoices in 2024." So now that they are finally current on their payables they have debt of about $13 million. They've managed this well.
"self funding" depends on what contract they end up with. Unfortunately little progress has been made on that. Let's see how that unfolds. As has always been the case, upside depends on the receipt of overdue receivables, contract ratification and pipeline reopening. The current stock price is still pricing in resolution of much of these within the next six months. Cheap for good reason.
"No double counting, if that point in the future when invoicing for an already invoiced but unpaid cost becomes necessary, it could simply be deducted from the past unpaid invoice(s) "
Sure. But rather than modeling the unadjusted CRP and no arrears I prefer to accrue credit for the arrears which comprise cost oil AND profit oil and then add the adjusted CRP value. Doesn't matter which way you do it so long as you don't double up on both 79% of the arrears which is CRP recovery. That would be a significant mistake.
GKP/MOL can never recover more costs than have been incurred. But they get a very slight offsetting advantage via the R Factor not rising so much until, of course, the arrears are paid. But this is trivial versus not being paid. So always model the CRP net of invoices else you risk double counting the CRP and arrears which are mostly CRP.
ValueS - to clarify, by "no" I meant no the R Factor would not be higher than 1.18. The R Factor is not rising because we haven't been paid the massive arrears but that is separate from working out what costs can be invoiced. Model each separately. And don't double count the arrears and the CRP as most of the arrears is CRP.
Seplat. The GROSS CRP as of Dec 31 was $224 million. GKP's share was 80% $179 million. The current enterprise value of GKP is $228 million. (SP 106.7p, ex rate 1.274, FD shares o/s 230.9). So one might say the CRP is 78% of GKP's current enterprise value.
No. The R Factor is based on actual costs incurred and actual receipts. So if we aren't being paid the arrears, but still incurring costs, the R factor will fall (or not rise). This will help current invoices marginally. 1.18 was exactly what I have in my model. But the cost pool still can't be invoiced twice.
Yes. But can't be double-counted in valuation and can't be invoiced twice. So model the CRP net of the receivables to estimate future invoices. Very important re: Note slide 8 "cost recovery pool supportive of cash flows"
(aa) can't even get the basic numbers right...
No surprises in the announcement. Terrible results but expected given circumstances. Management doing a great job minimising costs and keeping the field ticking over, continuing to tread water. Little to say about contract ratification and pipeline reopening. Current cash flows still flattered by historical cost recovery. Good that payables normalisation is now complete.
Ho hum.
"as long as they don't give away their assets in the form of capital returns to whining shareholders"
LOL Give away? The shareholders own the assets anyway
GKP should only invest that which they can recover from cost oil. The CRP, including that big chunk in the receivables balance, needs to be returned to shareholders.