First
Oil, now US Natural Gas Plunges off the Chart, "Negative Igniter" for New
Debt Crisis
Submitted
by testosteronepit on
12/23/2014 13:34 -0500
Wolf
Richter www.wolfstreet.com www.amazon.com/author/ wolfrichter
Friday,
natural gas futures plunged 6%. Monday morning, when folks were thinking about
the beautiful Santa Rally, NG futures plunged nearly 10% to $3.12 per million
Btu, the lowest since January 10, 2013. But the crazy day had just begun. NG
bounced off and jumped nearly 4%, only to give up much of it later. Tuesday
morning, as I'm finishing this up, NG continues to decline, now at $3.11/mmBtu. Down 30% from a month ago.
NG
demand peaks when the heating season starts. It's a bet on the weather. Our
gurus forecast warmer than normal temperatures across the country, so prices
plunged. Or shorts piled into the pre-holiday session with exaggerated effect to
make a quick buck.
Here
is what this 30-day, 30% plunge looks like (each bar = 5
hours):
Whatever
the cause, NG has traded below the cost of production of many wells for
years. That lofty $4.40/mmBtu on the left
side in the chart above is still below the cost of production for many
wells. The price simply fell from bad to terrible.
To
make the equation work, drillers have shifted from shale formations that produce
mostly "dry" natural gas to formations that also produce a lot of liquids, such
as oil, natural gasoline, propane, butane, or ethane that were fetching a
much higher price. Thus, they'd be immune to the low price of NG. They pitched
this strategy to investors to attract ever more money and keep the fracking
treadmill going.
Much
of this new money was in form of junk debt. Now energy companies account for over 15% of the Barclays
U.S. Corporate High-Yield Bond Index - up from less than 5% in
2005.
But
there is no respite for the American oil patch. The price of oil has plunged 50%
since June, the price of propane is down 50% since its recent high in
mid-September, and natural gasoline is down 32% since recent high in
mid-November. None of the fancy charts natural gas drillers have shown to
investors work at these prices.
It's
showing up everywhere. Take Samson Resources. As is typical in that space, there
is a Wall Street angle to it. One of the largest closely-held exploration
and production companies, Samson was acquired for $7.2 billion in 2011 by
private-equity firms KKR, Itochu Corp., Crestview Partners, and NGP Energy
Capital Management. They ponied up $4.1 billion. For the rest of the acquisition
costs, they loaded up the company with $3.6 billion in new debt. In addition to
the interest expense on this debt, Samson is paying "management fees" to these
PE firms, starting at $20 million per year and increasing by 5% every
year.
KKR
is famous for leading the largest LBO in history in 2007 at the cusp of the
Financial Crisis. The buyout of a Texas utility, now called Energy Future
Holdings Corp., was a bet that NG prices would rise forevermore, thus giving the
coal-focused utility a leg up. But NG prices soon collapsed. And in April 2014,
the company filed for bankruptcy.
Now
KKR is stuck with Samson. Being focused on NG, the company is another bet that
NG prices would rise forevermore. But in 2011, they went on to collapse further.
In 2014 through September, the company lost $471 million, the Wall Street Journal reported, bringing
the total loss since acquisition to over $3 billion. This is what happens when
the cost of production exceeds the price of NG for years.
Samson
has used up almost all of its available credit. In order to stay afloat a while
longer, it is selling off a good part of its oil-and-gas fields in Oklahoma,
North Dakota, Wyoming, and Colorado. It's shedding workers. Production will
decline with the asset sales - the reverse of what investors in its bonds had
been promised.
Samson's
junk bonds have been eviscerated. In early August, the $2.25 billion of 9.75%
bonds due in 2020 still traded at 103.5 cents on the dollar. By December 1, they
were down to 56 cents on the dollar. Now they trade for 43.5 cents on the
dollar. They'd plunged 58% in four months.
The
collapse of oil and gas prices hasn't rubbed off on the enthusiasm that PE firms
portray in order to attract new money from pension funds and the like. "We
see this as a real opportunity," explained KKR co-founder Henry Kravis at a
conference in November.
KKR,
Apollo Global Management, Carlyle, Warburg Pincus,
Blackstone and many other PE firms traipsed all over the oil patch, buying or
investing in E&P companies, stripping out
whatever equity was in them, and loading them up with piles of what was not long
ago very cheap junk bonds and even more toxic leveraged loans. This is how Wall
Street fired up the fracking boom.
PE
firms gathered over $100 billion in their energy funds since 2011. The nine
publicly traded E&P companies that represent the largest holdings have cost
PE firms at least $12.7 billion, the Wall Street Journal figured. This
doesn't include their losses on the smaller holdings. Nor does it include losses
from companies like Samson that are not publicly traded. And it doesn't include
losses pocketed by bondholders and leveraged loan holders or all the millions of
stockholders out there.
Undeterred,
Blackstone is raising its second energy-focused fund; it has a $4.5 billion
target, Bloomberg reported. The plunge in oil
and gas prices "has not created a lot of difficulties for us," CEO Schwarzman
explained at a conference on December 10. KKR's Kravis said at the same
conference that he welcomed the collapse as an opportunity. Carlyle co-CEO
Rubenstein expected the next 5 to 10 years to be "one of the greatest times" to
invest in the oil patch.
The
problem?
"If
you have an asset you already own, it's probably going to go down in value,"
Rubenstein admitted. But if you've got money to invest, in Carlyle's case about
$7 billion, "it's a great time to buy." They all agree: opportunities will be
bountiful for those folks who refused to believe the hype about fracking over
the past few years and who haven't sunk their money into energy companies. Or
those who got out in time.
Timing?
Not
for a while, says Oaktree Capital, the world's
biggest distressed-debt investor. Co-chairman Howard Marks told clients in a
December 18 letter, obtained by Bloomberg, that the plunge in oil and
gas prices could trigger a new debt crisis.
"We
knew great buying opportunities wouldn't arrive until a negative 'igniter'
caused the tide to go out, exposing the debt's weaknesses," he wrote. "The
current oil crisis is an example of something with the potential to grow into
that role."
Last
time that "negative igniter," as Marks calls it, was housing. Once the effects
began cascading to other sectors, it blew up the financial system. This time,
the "negative igniter" could be the outgrowth of the shale revolution. And as
was the case before the housing collapse, financial firms are already lining up
to profit from it.
The
Fed giveth, the Fed taketh away. What's going to crash next? Read. Oil Price Crash Triggered by the Fed? Amazing
Chart
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