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Who has the cash for a deal with IOC??
#1

Just for fun . FWIW

Look at CVX cash levels .What would happen to IOC's stock price with a deal with a SM??Some say a $50-100 price spike.

Debt-To-Equity /Cash/ Long-Term Debt

CVX .09/ $21.58 Billion/ $12.34 Billion

BP .41 /$16.36 Billion/ $49.08 Billion

XOM .07/ $13.26 Billion/ $8.93 Billion


What better place to spend $ 6 Billion of their STA$H than to acquire a major percentage of Elk/ Antelope?

Surely NOT on more Aussie LNG projects that cost 3 times as much per ton of LNG as E/A

And Merry Christmas. We have done Grandchild House number one. See the son tonight and more Grandkids XMAS day. Yeah for Grandkids.!!Then the Beach for us for New Years.

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#2

'jft310' pid='15180' datel Wrote:

Just for fun . FWIW

Look at CVX cash levels .What would happen to IOC's stock price with a deal with a SM??Some say a $50-100 price spike.

Debt-To-Equity /Cash/ Long-Term Debt

CVX .09/ $21.58 Billion/ $12.34 Billion

BP .41 /$16.36 Billion/ $49.08 Billion

XOM .07/ $13.26 Billion/ $8.93 Billion


What better place to spend $ 6 Billion of their STA$H than to acquire a major percentage of Elk/ Antelope?

Surely NOT on more Aussie LNG projects that cost 3 times as much per ton of LNG as E/A

And Merry Christmas. We have done Grandchild House number one. See the son tonight and more Grandkids XMAS day. Yeah for Grandkids.!!Then the Beach for us for New Years.

My count is 4 SM's remain as bidders.  Goal is to extract highest price from a SM, not an IOC or NOC where best current bid may originate.  Gives best immediate pps pop.  Each has a reason why they cannot lose out on PRL15 or even more.

XOM stomach lose out to SHELL?  NO

RDS stand losing out on PNG's best resource when they are PNG's preferred LNG operator?  NO

TOT whose OSH farm-ins have PRL15, ppl 237/38 surrounded, is it efficient for them to develop lesser adjacent parcels and to miss out on the grandaddy gas aggregation by absorbing IOC acreages?  NO

CVX has cash has been touring PNG has been stated to be joining Gulf LNG do they need a more profitable LNG project  to balance their Aussie plays?  YES

Take the needed time and get this right.  The more drill success the higher those bids go.

Merry Christmas Y'all.

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#3
Key words
"The more drill success the higher those bids go."
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#4

'jft310' pid='15182' datel Wrote:Key words "The more drill success the higher those bids go."

Paraphrase of Henry in Calio CC explained why he joined LNGL from MRO.  Surely more than Henry realize this.

'Sheer size of the resource,  that's what majors serch the world looking for.'

'Tremendous prolific wells, low cost marginal producers of anything in Asia'

'Several adjacent structures even more exciting than Elk/Antelope'

'Exploration potential is what makes an LNG project really profitable'

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#5
Henry drinks Bull juice. Must flow through his veins.
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#6
Sure is quiet----guess I was expecting /hoping for some news out of BOD meeting. Should at least have some drilling update soon.
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#7

'Tree' pid='15181' datel Wrote:

My count is 4 SM's remain as bidders.  Goal is to extract highest price from a SM, not an IOC or NOC where best current bid may originate.  Gives best immediate pps pop.  Each has a reason why they cannot lose out on PRL15 or even more.

XOM stomach lose out to SHELL?  NO

RDS stand losing out on PNG's best resource when they are PNG's preferred LNG operator?  NO

TOT whose OSH farm-ins have PRL15, ppl 237/38 surrounded, is it efficient for them to develop lesser adjacent parcels and to miss out on the grandaddy gas aggregation by absorbing IOC acreages?  NO

CVX has cash has been touring PNG has been stated to be joining Gulf LNG do they need a more profitable LNG project  to balance their Aussie plays?  YES

Take the needed time and get this right.  The more drill success the higher those bids go.

Merry Christmas Y'all.


Fast Follower strategy… Tree isn’t that the system you use to add to your wife collection?  CVX, RDS & TOT all need to feed the hopper.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/79614c9c-1485-11e2-8cf2-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz2Fypa78uh

Big oil must rediscover exploration mojo

By Guy Chazan

The majors have had a poor record of finding enough new reserves

It is rare that you hear a mea culpa from the head of a major oil company.

The penitent in question is Christophe de Margerie, chief executive of Total, the French oil group. In a recent interview, he confessed his company had been “a bit too easy-going”. It had fallen down on one of its primary tasks – exploring for new sources of oil. That had to change.

We need to be more aggressive,” he told the Financial Times. “We need to deliver more growth ... We have to insist on exploration as a priority.”

The admission seems bizarre. Can it really be true that a supermajor like Total is not doing enough to find more oil? Isn’t that precisely what the big oil companies are supposed to do?

The truth is, they do not – or at least not as much as they should. The majors spend billions of dollars every year on exploration. Yet, as a group, they have had a poor record of finding enough new reserves to replace the oil and gas they produce.

Analysis by energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie found that between 2001 and 2010 the eight majors’ reserve replacement ratio badly trailed those of the smaller independents and medium-sized players such as BG Group.

The evidence is not hard to find. The majors – with the exception of Italy’s ENI – were nowhere to be seen when vast quantities of gas were found off the coast of Mozambique last year and this. Big recent finds in Uganda, Ghana and French Guiana were made not by ExxonMobil or Royal Dutch Shell but by Tullow Oil.

The root of the problem lies in the mega-mergers of the late 1990s and early 2000s that created the behemoths we know today. The newly minted groups stayed focused on legacy areas where they had made big discoveries in the past – places like Angola and the Gulf of Mexico.

They also spent billions on vast liquefied natural gas projects in Qatar and Australia, and on the newly emerging shale gas plays in the US.

But in terms of conventional exploration – taking a punt on new, untapped basins – they dropped the ball. “If you don’t continue to feed the hopper by adding new acreage in new areas, you run out of opportunities,” says Julie Wilson, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie.

Mr de Margerie acknowledges that. For years, Total was wrapped up with absorbing rivals Elf Aquitaine and Petrofina. But speaking to investors last month, he admitted that for some time the enlarged group had “lacked new projects”.

Some consider the majors inherently disadvantaged in the race for new reserves because of their massive size.

Proponents of “small is beautiful” point to BG Group, which has 6,000 employees, compared to Shell’s 90,000, and has made 15 vast discoveries in the last 15 years.

“The time it takes between having a good idea in country X and getting it approved is very short,” says Malcolm Brown, BG’s director of exploration. “It’s one of our strengths.”

He cites the example of BG’s move into Kenya, where it signed contracts with the government for two offshore exploration blocks last year. BG had already done research on the licence area and had the technical basics in place, so was able to get an application together and submit it quickly. “Others said they couldn’t get it through their processes fast enough,” Mr Brown says.

The majors are now playing catch-up, moving into areas opened up by the independents. Such “fast followers” include Chevron, which has taken acreage in the new frontiers of Liberia and Sierra Leone, where Anadarko has found oil, and Shell and Total, which have taken stakes in Tullow’s French Guiana discovery.

They are also exploring more themselves. Shell’s spending on exploration increased by 35 per cent in 2012 to some $5bn, and it is hiring more geologists and geophysicists. Total also has a “new dynamic”, Mr de Margerie says. Its exploration potential has grown by 80 per cent since 2009, with lots of new positions in Africa and beyond. “It’s more risk, but also more potential,” he says.

The majors’ retreat from the business of exploring for and discovering oil created a vacuum which the independents have filled. The companies that found vast fields in places like the Middle East, Angola and the Gulf of Mexico have in many ways been eclipsed by more nimble players. In some cases the big new finds have been made by geologists who defected from the majors, frustrated by their cumbersome and conservative bureaucracies.

One thing is clear: the big oil companies need to rediscover their exploration mojo if they are not to fall behind in the increasingly competitive global race for reserves.

Guy Chazan is the Financial Times’ energy editor (John Authers is away)

guy.chazan@ft.com

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#8


Chevron Buys Encana, EOG Stake in Kitimat LNG Terminal


(Corrects Encana share movement in 11th paragraph.)

Chevron Corp. (CVX), the second-largest U.S. oil company, agreed to purchase a 50 percent operating interest in the proposed Kitimat liquefied natural gas project in Canada, buying out Encana Corp. and EOG Resources Inc. (EOG)’s stake. Terms weren’t disclosed.

Chevron will also acquire a 50 percent stake in the proposed Pacific Trail pipeline and 644,000 acres of drilling rights in British Columbia’s Horn River and Liard basins, according to a statement from the San Ramon, California-based company today. Chevron will be 50-50 partners in Kitimat withApache Corp. (APA) and will operate the LNG terminal and pipeline.

Chevron joins Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) and Petroliam Nasional Bhd in pursuing gas exports from western Canada to overseas markets, where the heating and power plant fuel sells at a premium to North American prices. The Kitimat project has a license from Canadian regulators to export 10 million metric tons a year of the liquefied fuel.

“It is ideally situated to meet rapidly growing demand for reliable, secure and cleaner-burning fuels in Asia, which are projected to approximately double from current levels by 2025,”Chevron Vice Chairman George Kirkland said in the statement. The transaction, subject to approval from Canadian regulators, is expected to close by the end of March.

Chevron and Apache, based in Houston, are partners in the Wheatstone LNG export project in Australia. Chevron also is developing the Gorgon LNG project in Australia, an effort that may cost as much as A$52 billion ($54 billion) and begin first shipments in 2015.


Apache Net


Apache expects to net about $400 million on the transaction, according to a separate statement today. It will sell a 50 percent stake in the Liard acreage to Chevron for $500 million, and pay Chevron to raise its stake in the terminal, the pipeline and the other producing areas to 50 percent from 40 percent.

“Chevron is the premier LNG developer with longstanding relationships in key Asian markets,” Apache Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Steven Farris said in a separate statement.

Both EOG and Encana held 30 percent stakes in the Kitimat project. Apache said it and Chevron will explore sales of stakes in the terminal and acreage to customers.

EOG, based in Houston, is selling to focus on onshore crude oil production, “which is generating more immediate reinvestment opportunities,” Chairman and CEO Mark Papa said in a separate release.

Chevron’s participation “represents a key step” to develop Canadian gas exports, Encana Corp. (ECA) CEO Randy Eresman said in a separate statement.

Chevron fell 1.1 percent to $108.52 at 10:02 a.m. in New York. Apache dropped 1.3 percent to $78.98 and EOG dropped 19 cents to $123.38. Encana declined 1.4 percent to C$19.84 at 10:19 a.m. in Toronto.

RBC Capital Markets acted as financial adviser for Apache, Encana and EOG on the Horn River acreage sale.

Exxon Mobil Corp. is the largest U.S. oil company

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#9

'jft310' pid='15180' datel Wrote:

Just for fun . FWIW

Look at CVX cash levels .What would happen to IOC's stock price with a deal with a SM??Some say a $50-100 price spike.

Debt-To-Equity /Cash/ Long-Term Debt

CVX .09/ $21.58 Billion/ $12.34 Billion

BP .41 /$16.36 Billion/ $49.08 Billion

XOM .07/ $13.26 Billion/ $8.93 Billion


What better place to spend $ 6 Billion of their STA$H than to acquire a major percentage of Elk/ Antelope?

Surely NOT on more Aussie LNG projects that cost 3 times as much per ton of LNG as E/A

And Merry Christmas. We have done Grandchild House number one. See the son tonight and more Grandkids XMAS day. Yeah for Grandkids.!!Then the Beach for us for New Years.

Irrelevant. Any SM that wants to do a deal can access plenty of cash anytime, wether they have cash on hand or not.

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#10
Corporations have two ways to access cash sell bonds or sell stock. Having cash means no fees to an investment bank to raise the money, no dilution of current shareholders and no harming debt to equity ratios.Most consider these relevant facts.Wall Street certainly looks at these type measures.Some investors look at these type measure. This is a multi billion dollar deal. But if anyone of SM size wants a deal they can do it. Returns in your investment is at least 4 years away.
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