2014 | 2015 | ||||||
Price: | 46.68 | EPS | $3.39 | $3.35 | |||
Shares Out. (in M): | 61 | P/E | 13.8x | 13.9x | |||
Market Cap (in $M): | 2,861 | P/FCF | nmf | nmf | |||
Net Debt (in $M): | 1,306 | EBIT | 367 | 380 | |||
TEV (in $M): | 4,167 | TEV/EBIT | 11.4x | 11.0x |
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I am long Rosetta Resources. This is an E&P company with “A” assets and “A” management. The stock is at $47 and I
think it’s worth $70 under the company’s current development plans, assuming a $90 WTI/$4.25 Nymex price deck.
Further upside may come from three drilling opportunities that the company hasn’t quantified yet, but we know enough
about them already to believe they have decent odds of materializing and that they could be substantial. Finally, there
are some near-term catalysts that could help crystallize the company’s value.
On the downside I think the stock could be worth $42, assuming $75 WTI/$3.50 Nymex, even without the incremental
drilling opportunities.
Company Detail
Rosetta is a Houston-based independent oil and gas producer. They use full cost accounting and their reserves auditor is
Netherland Sewell. In 2013 they produced 49,646 boe/d (+33% YoY) and had 278.5 mmboe of proved reserves (+39% YoY,
32% proved developed), for a reserve life index of 15.4 years. They had 249 net producing wells at 2013YE.
Rosetta’s Product Mix |
2013 Revenues |
2013 Production |
2013YE Reserves |
Natural gas |
18.1% |
37.1% |
40.5% |
Oil |
58.4% |
27.6% |
23.9% |
NGLs |
24.4% |
35.3% |
35.7% |
Total |
100.9% |
100.0% |
100.0% |
Condensate |
na |
14.3% |
15.5% |
The company was Calpine’s former E&P segment. They were spun out in 2005 on the heels of Calpine’s bankruptcy.
Not surprisingly, their production mix used to be greater than 90% natural gas, which is the fuel consumed by the vast
majority of Calpine’s electric generating plants. The idea behind vertically integrating gas production with electric generation
was to remove some of the volatility associated with one of the main cost inputs to the merchant electricity business.
That didn’t work out, and Rosetta found itself as a standalone company. At the time of the separation they had gas-focused
assets in a variety of plays. Over time they have divested almost all of those legacy assets. A few years after the spin they
began leasing up acreage in the Eagle Ford. Many of their executives are Burlington Resources alumni (that company was
sold to Conoco in 2006), and Burlington was known as the father of the Eagle Ford. In fact, Rosetta’s CEO, CFO, COO and T
reasurer used to be at Burlington.
Their Eagle Ford acreage was a grand slam. They were early to the play so they were able to sign leases at great prices,
and they have gotten some of the best results in the entire play. Their acreage is mostly in the condensate window. (More
on condensate later).
Obviously, you would hope for your acreage to produce as much black oil as possible (as opposed to the higher NGL and
gas mix you get in the condensate window), but Rosetta’s Eagle Ford wells have the highest average expected ultimate
recovery volumes (EURs, or lifetime production volumes) of any company in the play. The higher gas production actually
helps them in a way because they can occasionally run gas back into the wells – it adds lifting pressure at minimal cost.
From 2009-12 when the company was basically a pure-play Eagle Ford producer they grew debt-adjusted reserves and
production per share at CAGRs of 64.8% and 27.2%. All sources finding costs averaged $6.99 per boe over that period,
they had an average recycle ratio of 3.9x, and their reserve replacement rate (including revisions) averaged 642%. Those
are truly spectacular numbers.
They now have 62,772 net acres in the Eagle Ford. 26,236 of those acres are in a 9x10 mile section called the Gates Ranch
that could reasonably be characterized as a trophy asset. F&D costs in the Gates Ranch are just $4 per boe.
Rosetta remained a pure-play Eagle Ford producer until Mar-2013 when they reached a deal to buy 53,300 net acres in the
Permian Basin from Comstock. 40,000 of those acres are in Reeves County in the Delaware Basin of the Permian, and are
the company’s main focus in that play for now. The other 13,000 acres are in Gaines County in the Midland Basin of the
Permian, where the company is going to drill just enough vertical wells to hold the acreage. In Texas you only hold the
mineral rights down to the deepest zone you drill, so you may as well drill vertically in order to maximize the number of
zones you hold in case other zones unexpectedly pay off. This is important in the Permian Basin since multiple horizontal
zones could be prospective.
Importantly, the Comstock deal was negotiated under an exclusivity agreement, and Comstock needed liquidity because
they were a gas-weighted producer (85.6% of 2012 production volumes) with a high cost structure at a time of weak gas
prices. They were also highly levered (58.7% debt/capital; total debt of $2.99 per mcfe of PDP reserves).
Rosetta has been taking their time delineating the Reeves County acreage and probably won’t go into development mode
until 2015-16. I find that many E&P investors have short attention spans. They seem to be frustrated with a lack of Permian
well results from Rosetta, but being deliberate is the right long-term approach. Besides, there are several offset operators
including Concho and Energen that have been releasing attractive well results in the immediate vicinity and validating the play.
At this point the company is just in two basins and will probably remain that way for a while. They have recently done
bolt-on acquisitions in both basins and would do more if the right opportunities arose.
Eagle Ford:
Permian:
Remaining consolidated drilling inventory is 17-18 years.
Their credit metrics are temporarily elevated due to the Permian acquisition. Total debt/EBITDA is 1.7x and total debt/capital
is 52.7%. Total debt per mcfe of PDP reserves is $2.77. I should note that S&P upgraded them in December from B+ to BB-.
Why the stock is mispriced
As I mentioned earlier, E&P investors seem to have short attention spans. If a company isn’t showering them with catalysts they
begin to lose interest. And, if there’s even a hint of trouble they often shoot first and ask questions later. Fast money types dominate
the space. It doesn’t take much for them to turn on a company they loved only weeks before. That’s what has created the
opportunity with Rosetta.
First of all, the two companies’ acreage positions may be close to each other geographically, but that’s about as far as
the comparison goes. It’s not uncommon in the Eagle Ford for the rock’s characteristics to change dramatically if you
move just a few miles in one direction or the other. To cite an extreme case, up in DeWitt County if you move just a
few miles the value of the acreage can go from $100,000 per acre to $1,000 per acre.
Second, one of the reasons behind SM’s type curve reductions was they hadn’t drilled in all the areas of their acreage,
yet they were making assumptions about the characteristics of the rock over entire areas of their acreage based on
well results in certain areas. In contrast, Rosetta has drilled in every corner of the Gates Ranch, so they know what
they have. They aren’t extrapolating like SM was.
Third, in a textbook case of market inefficiency, investors assumed that since SM Energy and Rosetta both have acreage
positions in the Eagle Ford called “Briscoe Ranch”, and that since Briscoe was the area where SM had the most consequential
changes, that Rosetta’s Briscoe Ranch type curves were also at risk. After all, if both positions have the same name they
must have the same rocks, right?
Wrong. Many oil leaseholds are named after the families that own the land. In some cases a family owns so much
land that they end up leasing drilling rights to multiple operators. However, it’s rare that they would own so much land
that two operators on their land would be very far apart, but that is the case with Briscoe Ranch. Dolph Briscoe was
governor of Texas from 1973-79. He was the largest individual landowner in Texas. He and his family have about
640,000 acres, or nearly 1,000 square miles. Understandably then, two people can be standing on land owned by
Briscoe but also be very far apart.
Rosetta and SM Energy both leased acreage from the Briscoe family but Rosetta’s Briscoe Ranch acreage is in Dimmit
County and SM’s Briscoe Ranch acreage is in Webb County. They are roughly 20 miles away from each other. Again,
you don’t have to move very far in the Eagle Ford to see a big change in the economics of the acreage. Rosetta’s Briscoe
Ranch type curves are fine.
Valuation
I prefer to value E&P companies from the bottoms up on an NAV basis rather than using multiples. Fortunately, Rosetta’s acreage
portfolio is simple enough and consistent enough to allow a granular NAV approach that doesn’t take a whole month to model.
You can get most of the assumptions you need from their Feb-2014 Investor Presentation. The model I’m using isn’t quite
simple enough to include in this writeup, so I will share the highlights and I will be glad to answer any of your questions in the
discussion thread.
I use $90 WTI / $4.25 Nymex as my base commodity price deck for the following reasons:
I think it’s legitimate to be concerned about the demand side. What if China implodes? Core Labs estimates the world’s
natural decline rate is 2.5 bbdl/d even after maintenance capex, so the world could lose almost 3% of its daily demand of
86 mmbl/d without supply/coming unmatched. The decline rates on shale wells are so huge that even a modest pullback
in domestic drilling activity would bring supply and demand back into alignment within just one year, which is a new dynamic
in the oil industry. Moreover, spot prices are $99 WTI/$4.47 Nymex, so a new investment in ROSE based on $90/$4.25 would
begin its life with some margin of safety already built in.
The reasoning behind using a $4.25 gas price isn’t 100% scientific. I run a standard combination of oil prices through the
E&P companies I look at, and I use gas prices that are roughly 1/20 the level of the oil prices. I also model NGLs at 40%
of the oil price. Don’t get too hung up on the gas price. Over 80% of the company’s revenue last year was from liquids.
Base Case ($90/$4.25) |
Value ($mm) |
Per Share |
PDP reserves |
$1,660 |
$27 |
Hedges, working capital |
$130 |
$2 |
Long-term debt |
($1,585) |
($26) |
Gates Ranch |
$2,500 |
$41 |
Other Eagle Ford |
$900 |
$15 |
Permian vertical |
$200 |
$3 |
Permian horizontal |
$500 |
$8 |
Total |
$4,300 |
$70 |
Low Case ($75/$3.50) |
Value ($mm) |
Per Share |
PDP reserves |
$1,400 |
$23 |
Hedges, working capital |
$190 |
$3 |
Long-term debt |
($1,585) |
($26) |
Gates Ranch |
$1,700 |
$27 |
Other Eagle Ford |
$700 |
$11 |
Permian vertical |
$50 |
$1 |
Permian horizontal |
$200 |
$3 |
Total |
$2,650 |
$42 |
Upside Opportunity #1 – Gates Ranch Downspacing
When the Eagle Ford first got started people were using 120 and 80 acre spacing. Now some of the producers are down to
40 acre spacing. I have been modeling the Gates Ranch on 55 acre spacing. The company hasn’t been seeing interference
at this density, but they are determined to increase the densities until they get the wells to talk. In fact, they are now testing
25 acre spacing on a section of the Gates Ranch. They believe that due to the extreme tightness of the rock the number one
factor driving oil recovery is the stimulated rock volume in place. The evidence so far supports that assertion. The oldest
Gates Ranch wells are >4 years old so the data is there. Even if they get down to a spacing density that causes the wells to
talk, the wells in the Gates Ranch pay out in less than one year, so when interference does begin to occur it will likely be at a
time in the wells’ lives when it will have only a modest impact on the NPV.
Immediately going from 55 acre spacing to 40 acre spacing would add $8 per share.
Immediately going from 55 acre spacing to 25 acre spacing would add $18 per share.
Upside Opportunity #2 – Permian “Basket”
There are a number of things the company can do to drive upside on their Permian acreage like improving their completion
techniques, driving down well costs, and pooling acreage with offset operators to achieve longer laterals.
Driving better completion techniques and lowering well costs is pretty standard stuff across the industry. It doesn’t have
anything to do with the Permian specifically except to say that we’re in the early innings of cracking the code in this particular
basin, so it’s almost inevitable that Rosetta will improve their EURs, lower their well costs, and succeed at tighter downspacing
on the standard 5,000 foot lateral lengths that people are modeling. They appear to be making good progress on that front
already. They have been guiding to $8.5 million horizontal well costs, but their most recent Hz well cost $7.6 million.
Finally, they will eventually move to pad drilling in 2015-16 and that should provide further efficiencies.
Beyond that, there are unique features to this play that could deliver significant upside.
Upside Opportunity #3 – Upper Eagle Ford new venture
Rosetta is testing an additional zone in their Eagle Ford acreage known as the Upper Eagle Ford (UEF). If commercially viable,
it could add tremendous upside to the company’s value.
The Eagle Ford actually consists of two zones – Upper and Lower. The section that the play is known for is the Lower Eagle
Ford (LEF). As you move from the Southwest portion of the Eagle Ford to the Northeast the thickness narrows. The Southwest
section where Gates Ranch is has a total thickness of 250-350 feet, with the LEF comprising 50-75 feet and the UEF taking up 200-275 feet.
By way of comparison, up in Gonzales County the Eagle Ford’s total thickness is just 90-110 feet with the LEF comprising 30-40
feet of it and the UEF taking up 60-70 feet.
Rosetta is running four separate well tests in order to determine the prospectivity of the UEF. Three of the tests are on the
Gates Ranch and one is on their smaller Lasseter & Epright (L&E) lease.
Rosetta hasn’t released well results yet. Evaluating the rocks in advance of their future disclosures is beyond my circle of
competence but we can read the tealeaves. What I see looks pretty good.
The first pilot in the Gates Ranch has been online since May-2013, so the company has plenty of data about how those initial
UEF wells are performing. Given that first year decline rates for shale wells are so huge, the data you get in the first year tells
you almost everything you need to know in order to evaluate the economics. In other words, the company should have plenty
of data from the first pilot to have an idea of whether drilling more UEF wells is a waste of money. Plus, the company started
another two pilots that they’ve obviously been able to gather additional data from.
These guys are methodical operators. Their philosophy is ready, aim, fire; not ready, fire, aim.
What we know at this point is they have well results from three UEF pilots, we know they’re not the type of people to screw
around with the shareholders’ money, and now they’ve chosen to move forward with a fourth pilot that will be their biggest yet,
consisting of 11 wells – 5 in the UEF and 6 in the LEF. At an average well cost of >$6 million, this implies they’re spending over
$60 million to do the fourth test. They are not going to spend $60 million on something that has dry hole risk. I would say the
fact pattern looks favorable.
One factor that will help the economics of UEF wells is the company expects to use sand proppant in their completions, whereas
they have been almost exclusively using ceramic proppant in their LEF Gates Ranch completions. Using ceramic in the Gates Ranch
adds $1 million to LEF well costs, which are currently running $6.5 million.
I have been valuing the Gates Ranch at $2.5 billion ($41 per share) using $90 WTI/$4.25 Nymex in my development model.
If the UEF is worth even half that it’ll be a giant home run.
The company expects to release its first UEF well results on the Q1’14 call.
Let’s talk about condensate!
The bear case on Rosetta revolves around the company taking big haircuts on its condensate realizations.
The company defines condensate as oil that has API (American Petroleum Institute) gravity above 55 degrees. The
generally accepted line between crude oil and condensate seems to be 45 degrees, but there is no official standard. Either
way, it’s very light oil – so light in fact that back in the day people would sometimes put condensate directly in their gas tank.
The Eagle Ford in general produces light oil, often above 45 degrees.
For comparison, conventional light sweet U.S. crude like WTI has an API gravity of 39 and heavy crudes like Mexican
Maya have an API gravity of 20.
Condensate (as Rosetta defines it) accounted for 14.3% of the company’s 2013 production and 15.5% of their net proved reserves.
The concern is that Gulf Coast refiners aren’t geared up to handle lots of light sweet, and as Eagle Ford condensate production
volumes rise there’s a risk that Rosetta may have to take steeper discounts on their condensate. The importance of this risk is
emphasized by the fact that Rosetta’s 2013 annual report was their first one to break out the portion of their reserves and
production coming from condensate.
For many years the U.S. produced 400,000 – 600,000 barrels of condensate per day. By 2013 the nation’s condensate
production was over 1 million bbl/d, with the Eagle Ford accounting for over ½ of that. For the time being increased domestic
condensate production is simply displacing the ~1 million bbl/d of light sweet crude we still import. But domestic condensate
production could eventually displace all of the imports and hit the “refining wall”.
Ordinarily, the economic solution would be for producers to seek international export markets where pricing is stronger.
However, crude oil exports are prohibited. They were banned by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, which
defines crude as any hydrocarbon that “remains liquid at atmospheric pressure after passing through surface separating
facilities and which has not been processed through a crude oil distillation tower.” Since unrefined condensate from field
separation facilities (or “lease condensate”) is specifically defined by the regulations as crude oil, it is also subject to export
restrictions.
Therefore, growing domestic oil and condensate production will be unable to seek higher Brent prices in global markets,
meaning it will likely continue to trade at a discount to Brent. The lower utility of condensate relative to black oil means
it should be priced at a further discount to domestic benchmarks like LLS.
There is a limited solution in the works for condensate. Kinder Morgan is building a condensate splitter near its Galena Park
terminal on the Houston Ship Channel. The $370 million project will have two units with total capacity of 100,000 bpd.
The splitter facility will link to the Kinder Morgan Crude and Condensate Pipeline which transports product from the Eagle Ford
to Houston. The first unit is expected to go into service in Q1’14 and the second unit is expected in Q2’15.
The nice thing about this kind of facility is it doesn’t take very long to construct and it’s far cheaper than refineries
($3,700 per barrel of daily capacity vs. $30,000 for a refinery). Moreover, companies like Valero and Magellan Midstream
Partners have discussed plans for a further 12 such plants with total condensate capacity of 460,000 barrels per day.
If all those projects are built it might be enough to absorb the Eagle Ford’s incremental condensate production. The Eagle
Ford’s total energy-equivalent production is currently running over 1 million barrels per day, and is expected to increase by
another 700,000 bbl/d by 2017. Even if half that incremental production, or 350,000 bbl/d, is condensate then Rosetta
would be okay because the >500,000 bbl/d of projects could absorb it.
Condensate pricing is running $13-14/bbl below LLS, or $89-90/bbl. (LLS is at $104/bbl).Recall that my $75 WTI/$3.50
Nymex valuation puts the value of ROSE at $42 per share. That gives condensate prices plenty of room to fall from
current levels before creating material downside to the current stock price. I think this issue is largely priced in.
It’s hard to find good condensate data. One place you can check prices is here:
http://www.fhr.com/%28X%281%29S%28bnhaye55455ht255ag4tueeq%29%29/refining/bulletins.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
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