Case File
efta-efta01385334DOJ Data Set 10CorrespondenceEFTA Document EFTA01385334
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 10
Reference
efta-efta01385334
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
[Figure 21: Gassy E&P names — FY 17E production and cape* guidance changes since start of year
Total Production (lAboikl)
Start of year
OaOvert
Gas Production (limas/di
Slart of year
Quart
Ca(ed$91)
Start of year
az rent
%Change In Guidance (PF Acquisitions
II Divestitures)
Tots
Gas
Roductoo
Roducoaa
Capex
Maher Quality lines
AR
2200
2275
1650
1663
1450
1500
3%
1%
3%
GFCR
1073
1063
944
963
1050
1160
1%
1%
10%
MN
2466
2480
2189
2189
1225
1225
09
C%
29
SRC
2074
2005
NA
1351
1150
1150
3%
NA
0%
Lower Quality Names
ER
310
318
247
251
300
302
2%
2%
3%
OS
3332
3231
2411
2370
2200
2400
1% •
NA
9%
• hotates 'salters &Austad for A&D
Sart Canary as Dana fla
IrOscates positwe ree 90M
Ylatat movie rewsons
hthcates Wgely neutral rpm' to gudance laves
FCF-growth equation and FCF B/E oil price remain differentiators for us
As discussed above, standard credit themes are back to center stage in the
sector. We focus on the cash flow model - a good proxy for asset quality from
the producing side - as a key differentiator among E&P credits. For the better
quality names, our analysis focuses on identifying names with a superior FCF-
growth equation. For lower quality names, with their high cost structure and
therefore significantly higher vulnerability to commodity downside, we tend to
focus on the breakeven oil price needed to keep FCF neutral in a maintenance
mode, along with downside asset valuations.
The Higher Quality Oily names already have established a fairly stable FCF
model for a $50 oil environment with an ability to deliver solid double digit
production growth with neutral or modestly negative FCF.
PE is the only
exception but it is sitting on nearly $1BN of cash.
Among the Mid Quality credits, we see a divergence. Among the emerging
Permian names, we are positive on WPX (BUY-rated) given an impressive
growth outlook (32% production CAGR in FY 17-19E) along with a neutral FCF
model by end-FY 19E even at $50 oil. In contrast, QEP (SELL-rated) will grow
at almost half the pace during the period and still would have a modestly
negative FCF in Pe 19E.
Among the non-Permian names, we are more
constructive on Oasis versus its larger Bakken player, WLL - both HOLD rated.
OAS has meaningfully lower FCF B/E oil price (-$43) vs. closer to $50 for WLL,
and just acquired a Permian asset with equity. Apart from greater resilience to
lower oil prices, this also implies the former generates much faster volume
growth (we see -12% CAGR during FY 16-19E vs. -4% for WLL) with lower
FCF burn.
Among the Lower Quality Oily names, the three non-shale names - CRC, DNR
and MEG - have relatively low capex requirements given their low-decline
asset base.
DNR and MEG have also driven solid improvements in the
opex/capex cost structure. Therefore, despite their high opex cost structure,
these credits have FCF B/E oil price closer to $50 oil. In fact, for MEG, that
number should go down significantly once their ongoing expansion project is
complete in early FY 19. At the other end, EPE, despite significant strides in
bringing down maintenance capex and opex costs, still has an FCF B/E oil price
well north of $60 given the capital structure and asset base.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
Page 59
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
DB-SDNY-0086618
CONFIDENTIAL
SDNY_GM_00232802
EFTA01385334
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.