Oil Stocks, a Cheap Way to Buy Crude Oil Reserves
Commodities / Crude Oil Jan 24, 2010 - 05:10 AM GMTBy: DailyWealth
 Chris Mayer writes: We really don't know as much about the oil market as we think we   do.
Chris Mayer writes: We really don't know as much about the oil market as we think we   do. 
                
                There are many numbers out there, but most of these involve a lot of   guesswork. For example, we really don't know just how much oil the world will   need. The U.S. Department of Energy says we'll need 106.6 million barrels a day   by 2030, but how does it know? It can't know. It can't know what the world will   look like in 2030. 
We don't really know how much oil we're discovering or how much will actually come to the market any time soon. We don't really know how much it will cost to get this oil. We can guess, but our guesses are frequently wrong. Goldman Sachs wrote in a research report issued in February of last year (230 Projects to Change the World) that the cost of bringing on additional oil sands project would come to $80-$90 a barrel. It sounds nice, but it's a guess.
We   don't know a lot, even though we put decimal points on lots of numbers as if we   knew precisely. And there is plenty of room for people to fudge numbers and make   up stuff. It happens all the time. 
              
              Of course, no one knows what the   price of oil will be, but there is no shortage of forecasts. Goldman Sachs says   it will be $95 by the end of 2010. Deutsche Bank says $65. They are all   guessing. 
              
              There is one thing we do know. And fortunately, this is the   most important thing to remember as an investor in oil: The market is still   pricing proved oil reserves at less than replacement cost. 
              
              In other   words, it is cheaper in today's market to buy proven reserves in the stock   market than to drill for new ones. 
              
              I would cite the 2008 reserve and   finding cost study published by Howard Weil. It shows the average cost of   reserves through the drill bit is about $43 per barrel, with the median (or   midpoint) around $25 per barrel. These are hard numbers, not soft guesses. You   can do this yourself and find out how much it costs for your favorite oil   company to add a barrel of proved oil reserves by drilling for it. 
              
              So we   have a good idea of what it costs to create a barrel of proved oil reserves   today. Figuring out these numbers is easier than guessing what the price of oil   will be in the future. Granted, even these cost numbers will change. There are   no constants. 
              
              But here is the trick. You want to buy oil companies when   you can pick up proved oil reserves for a lot less than what it costs to produce   them. In the market, that's where we are today. In fact, you can pick up proved   reserves for less than $15 a barrel. 
              
              Here is a scatter plot by an energy   firm I respect a great deal, Lucas Capital Management. It shows you the universe   of stocks it follows. EV is enterprise value, which you can think of as the cost   to acquire the entire business, both the stock and the debt. So EV/BOE shows you   how much you are paying per barrel of oil. It plots this number against reserve   life. Take a look: 

              The math is easy. You have lots of companies here in which you can   buy oil in the ground for under $10 a barrel... and remember it costs on average   $25 a barrel to replace it. 
              
              I could not make a more compelling argument   for oil stocks than this. 
              
              Buying for less than replacement costs is one   of my main compasses in investing – whether I'm buying potash mines or gold   mines or factories or oil rigs or what have you. If I can buy it in the stock   market for less than it costs to replace those assets – and as long as I'm not   buying buggy whips – then I've got a good chance of making money. 
              
              That's   because the stock market is, after all, just a market. Eventually, prices   correct. In the oil market, we'll see more acquisitions. It's cheaper and easier   to grow reserves that way. The buying pressure will lift the price of oil stocks   so the disparity is not so great. Simple as that. 
              
              In the case of oil, we   are also looking at strong odds that the costs of producing a barrel of oil   reserves will go up. Recently, The Wall Street Journal ran a piece titled   "Cramped on Land, Big Oil Bets at Sea." 
              
              Now, you've probably heard of   all the big deep-water oil projects. All the major oil companies are moving   farther offshore in their quest for oil. The WSJ article leads with this:   "Big Oil never wanted to be here, in 4,300 feet of water far out in the Gulf of   Mexico, drilling through nearly five miles of rock. It is an expensive way to   look for oil." 
              
              Yes, it is. This is another of the great unknowns. We   don't know how much it will cost at the end of the day to get this oil. We know   that it will cost a lot. Chevron spent $2.7 billion over 10 years on just the   first phase of a deep-water oil project in the Gulf. 
              
              That's one of the more tame projects. Some of the   sub-salt discoveries involve drilling more than 30,000 feet. They will be the   most expensive wells ever drilled. You really don't need to know a lot about   geology or oil to guess that this deep-water oil is going to be more expensive   than the good old oil wells onshore. 
              
              So the average cost of reserves is   likely to go higher. Meaning that if you can lock in quality, low-cost,   long-lived reserves today for only $15 a barrel or less – you should do it.   That's why you own oil stocks today. 
              
              Good investing, 
              
              Chris 
              
              Editor's note: Chris Mayer is the editor of Capital &   Crisis, a monthly advisory we consider required reading at   DailyWealth. With Chris' research, you can always count on contrarian   investment ideas you won't read about anywhere else. Click here to learn more about Capital &   Crisis.
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