Case File
efta-efta01385319DOJ Data Set 10CorrespondenceEFTA Document EFTA01385319
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 10
Reference
efta-efta01385319
Pages
0
Persons
0
Integrity
Loading PDF viewer...
Summary
Ask AI About This Document
Extracted Text (OCR)
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
3 January 2018
HY Corporate Credit
HY Multi Sector.Media. Cable & Satellite
HY Energy Outlook
Jared Weil,
On market rebalancing on solid footing. but potential
retracement in the cards En early 2018
After three consecutive years of oversupply, the global
oil market will likely a see a deficit in 2017, although
slight (-0.18 mmbbls/d). The OPEC decision last month
to extend production quotas sets up for an ultimate
rebalancing of the market - supply and demand is
expected to be largely balanced in 2018 and 2019
though that would mean little progress in addressing
the sizeable inventory surplus. That will come in 2020
when the market will see a meaningful supply deficit (-
0.75 mmbbls/d) as demand grows, US onshore supply
slows down and non-OPEC production declines. While
the current rally in oil prices is backed by an improving
fundamental outlook, there is potential for a pullback.
The key near-term swing factor is US onshore supply
and the outlook for that sector is turning positive -
drilling activity has bottomed while completions should
pick up pace as significant new frac capacity (0.5-1.0
million hhp) is coming. Production from US onshore in
Q1 18 should drive the market back to oversupply after
two quarters of deficit.
This could drive a modest
pullback in oil prices during 1H 18. Longer term, falling
breakeven levels of major prospective projects (non-
OPEC. non-shale), especially deepwater, will likely keep
a lid on oil prices.
Between 04 16 and 03 17,
breakeven Brent oil price (10% discounted) of major
pre-FID projects have fallen from $53/bbl to $46/bbl.
For new Canadian oil sands projects, 365 (Brent) could
be a threshold for additional supply kicking in.
US net gas
normal winter key to absorb coming
production surge
For most of this year, the outlook for the 2018 gas
market had been largely supportive of a $3 price -
driven by two factors: first, the expectation that by the
2017-18 withdrawal season, the sizeable working gas
inventory surplus would be whittled down, aided by
flattish production and pop in exports, especially LNG.
That has worked out with the inventory levels at a
modest deficit (121 Bcf or 3% lower than 5-year
average) by mid-November compared to a 265 Bcf
surplus (15% higher) at the start of the injection season.
The second was the expectation of a normal winter
after two consecutive years of very mild winters -
warmer-than usual weather during first half of
December has highlighted the downside risks to this
thesis.
Normal winter demand is crucial for
maintaining S/D balance next year considering the
market is set for an Appalachian-driven production
surge in 2018 given significant progress made on
takeaway capacity expansion in the Northeast. About
4 Bcf/d of takeaway capacity has been added in the
region between July and mid-November and another
-4 Bcf/d of new capacity is scheduled to become
Page 44
operational by 01 18. EIA currently estimates YoY
production growth of 6.2 Bcf/d next year.
EIA's
forecast of a largely balanced market and >$3 gas
price is predicated on A) higher export demand (+1.65
Bcf/d YoY) which is on track and B) a normal winter
driving up heating demand by 1.42 Bcf/d YoY. If the
latter fails to materialize, we could see price
floundering below $3. This was highlighted in first half
of December when 2018 gas strip went below $2.70
after trading in the $2.9043.10 range for most of 2017
- though it has since bounced back close to the lower
end of the range given a strong revival in winter,
especially in the Northeast and Midwest.
H Y tied' approaching a 'Hormel' sector
In the two years following the collapse in oil prices in
2H 14, E&P players were focused on structural
changes to the business model which could fit into a
reshaped oil market. This included efforts to repair
balance sheet (equity issue, asset sales) and large scale
overhaul of the asset portfolio (mainly a shift to
Permian).
By early 2017, the revamped corporate
strategies were largely in place. The HY Energy index
is currently trading only modestly wide of the broader
HY index (50 bps wider), a far cry from the >1,000 bps
gap in early 2016.
Meanwhile, oil markets in 2017,
while volatile, had established a $40 floor (for WTI).
With the oil market settling at the "new normal" range,
the exit of weak players from the market and major
sector themes (like the Permian Premium) having
played out, the HY E&P group has been transitioning
into a "normal" HY sector with standard credit themes
like operational performance, cash flow models, and
balance sheets allowing for greater differentiation.
We focus on the cash flow model - a good proxy for
asset quality - as a key differentiator for E&P credits.
For the better quality names, our analysis focuses on
identifying names with a
superior
FCF-growth
equation. For lower quality names, we tend to focus
on the breakeven oil price needed to keep FCF neutral
in a maintenance mode, along with downside asset
valuations. Based on the above, in the Mid Quality
space, we are positive on WPX Energy (BUY-rated) and
Oasis
Petroleum
(HOLD-rated)
as
they
otter
significantly faster growth through FY 19E with lower
cash burn when compared with their respective peers -
QEP Resources (SELL-rated) and Whiting Petroleum
(HOLD-rated). Among Lower Quality oily names, we
note that most names (with the exception of EP
Energy), are well positioned to deliver neutral FCF with
flat production at WTI oil price close to $50. Many of
these names have driven solid improvements to their
opex/capex cost structure in recent years driving down
FCF breakeven oil price substantially.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
DB-SDNY-0086603
SDNY_GM_00232787
EFTA01385319
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.