
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
February 12, 2010
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** Don’t You Get It?
*** Profiting from Mayhem
*** Will Obama Destroy Any Hope of
*** And More
Don’t You Get It?
What a week. Mohmoud Ahmadinejad ordered
Global warming, according to the ‘experts’, is always and
everywhere an anthropogenic phenomenon; except for when it isn’t.
Sometimes cows contribute to it too. And sometimes, even in an
overheating world, 55-plus inches of snow fall on the Nation’s
Capital.
Don’t you get it?
All of this snow confirms the pattern of a warming world.
Global warming, you see, is both secular and cyclical like a bull
market. When it’s colder it’s because the world is warming.
And when it’s warmer it’s because the world is warming. In
other words, always buy the dip.
All satire aside. President Obama would rather punish
domestic oil producers rather than attain
Enjoy,
M.N. Gordon
Great Depression Online
---
Will Obama Destroy Any Hope of
By Charles S. Brant, Energy Correspondent,
Casey Research
The
Imagine in 2010 the Obama administration persuades Congress
to pass a budget that results in a reduction of domestic oil
production by 10% - 20%, making the supply/demand imbalance even
more lopsided. Foreign oil companies will gain a distinct advantage
over American domestic operators as an unintended consequence of
these proposals.
Sound farfetched? It’s closer to reality than you may
think… If it comes to pass, it will likely be the biggest structural
change in the
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In early 2009, the Obama administration proposed to
eliminate significant tax incentives for the oil and gas industry.
These tax benefits were put in place decades ago to incentivize oil
and gas producers to develop domestic sources of energy, while
recognizing that oil and gas exploration entailed special risks.
Two of the proposed repeals with the most potential impact relate
to what the industry refers to as “percentage depletion” as well as
“intangible drilling costs” (IDC).
Tax incentives explained
The first proposal involves eliminating the deduction for
percentage depletion. Currently, the tax code allows small oil and
gas producers to choose between two different tax deductions,
percentage depletion or cost depletion (Big Oil’s ability to use
percentage depletion was severely limited years ago).
Percentage depletion allows a tax deduction of 15% of the
annual gross revenue of a well, continuing as long as the well
produces and even after 100% of the costs have been recovered. On
the other hand, cost depletion is calculated as the amount of oil or
gas produced annually as a percentage of the total reserves of the
reservoir. This deduction ceases when 100% of costs have been
recovered (after which the producer may switch to percentage
depletion).
From a practical standpoint, this means many small
stakeholders, including investors and lessors who are not directly
involved in the operations of the wells, will lose their ability to
deduct depletion altogether, putting them at a significant
disadvantage to their larger competitors.
And cost depletion is pretty much out of the question for
most small stakeholders, as it’s extremely difficult for them to
calculate. Small stakeholders in wells often aren’t entitled to the
proprietary reservoir data developed by the operator of the well,
which is necessary to calculate cost depletion. While the operators
do disclose reservoir data in their annual reports, they rarely
contain enough detail for a small stakeholder to locate information
relating to a small field or well in which the stakeholder has an
interest. Oil and gas stakeholders – such as individual royalty
owners, royalty trust investors, and landowners, who all benefit
from leasing land to oil and gas explorers – will immediately see
the value of their investment decrease while simultaneously paying
more in taxes every year.
The other proposal relates to drilling costs. Under
current rules, oil and gas producers can elect to deduct certain
intangible costs related to the drilling and workover of wells,
including labor, drilling fluids, and drilling rig time. By
electing to deduct instead of capitalizing and amortizing expenses,
explorers recoup their costs faster. If the Obama administration
does away with intangible drilling costs, oil and gas producers will
no longer be incentivized to reinvest in new drilling projects, and
new exploration will decline.
Small oil and gas producers will also rethink their
decisions to pursue riskier prospects if drilling incentives are
reduced. The only projects that will be worthwhile to undertake
will be the “sure win deals.” And if they do decide to drill, they
won’t recoup their costs as quickly, which means they’ll be slower
to start new projects. Without the tax incentives, marginal
producing wells, which might otherwise be reworked and continue to
produce for years, will be more likely to be plugged and abandoned.
So what if marginal wells are no longer subsidized?
Taxpayers shouldn’t be supporting bad assets and small oil and gas
companies that operate them.
That’s a fair point. But it’s significant to note that 85%
of the total oil wells in the
Back in May 2009, when it came time to include the
president’s proposals limiting oil and gas tax incentives in the
FY2010 budget, cooler heads prevailed in Congress and the proposals
were not enacted. However, you can bet that similar policies
affecting the industry will be enacted sooner rather than later.
Profiting from the mayhem
All independent, non-integrated
Next, oil services companies will suffer as their small and
medium-sized customer bases shrivel up. Regardless of size, all
exploration and production companies with significant exposure to
It’s also almost guaranteed the market will overreact and
punish any
Oil and gas companies with conservative balance sheets,
diversified assets outside of the
Big Oil identified the
Energy prices across the board will explode upwards and
stay high until the production void left by oil and gas can be
replaced by renewable energies, nuclear, or coal. The coming energy
crisis will present you with plenty of opportunities to profit if
your portfolio is correctly positioned.
Sincerely,
Charles S. Brant
Energy Correspondent, Casey Research
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