12-Risk and Economics - RTW
12-Risk and Economics - RTW
12-Risk and Economics - RTW
Robert Hofmann
E-mail: robert.hotmann@Halliburton.com
Operating Revenues
Pattern of revenue in future
periods must be evaluated.
Time 0
(yr)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Operating Expenses (OPEX)
Capital
Investments
(CAPEX)
To account for the time value of money, all future operating revenues, Operating expenses &
Capital Investments must be brought back to a reference point or time 0 or discounting future
cash flows using a discount factor.
Discounting converts the future cash flow into equivalent present worth. (Cost of Capital)
Compounding converts a present sum of money into the equivalent future sum.
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Before Tax Model: Cash Inflow & Cash Outflow
Cash Inflow = product stream (crude oil, LPG, NGL,C5+, LNG, etc.) times the
projected price of the product.
Cash Outflow is divided into the following categories:
Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) Usually large expenses incurred at
beginning of project
Geology & Geophysical (G&G) Costs
Right of access to property
Acquisition of seismic data
Seismic processing & interpretation
Tax purposes Usually expensed in the year that the costs were incurred
Drilling Costs which depend upon the following parameters
Type of well (prod., appraisal, delineation or development well)
Well type (side-track, vertical, horizontal, multilateral, water disposal or gas/water
injection
Type of drilling contract & rig type
Depth of well & complexity of formations
Casing scheme
Drilling muds & type & number of bits
Testing & coring requirements
Completion rig and equipment
Process Facility Costs (Some of the facilities are required initially whereas others may
be required later in the life of the property.)
Wellheads
Flow lines
Storage tanks
Re-completion of individual well into another producing formation
Side-tracking existing well w/ short radius or horizontal well
Installation of artificial lift facilities if field initially flowed naturally
Major upgrading/replacement of existing facilities
Facilities for secondary recovery (waterflood or miscible gas injection)
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Before Tax Model: Cash Outflow
Cash Outflow is divided into the following categories: (Continued)
Operating Expenses (OPEX) Occur periodically & required by day-to-day operations
Feedstock In the absence of fair market value, economic cost of manpower, materials,
capital should be utilized.
Utilities Economic cost of gas & electricity, manpower, materials & capital
Maintenance Material costs and manpower costs.
Inspection costs
Preventative Maintenance costs
Replacement & parts costs
Administrative & General Overhead
Labor (admin., lab, stores, medical, security)
Materials & Supplies (electricity, stationary, food, lodging, misc.)
Services (Communications, computer, insurance, travel, training)
Production Costs
Lifting Costs
Treatment Costs of dehydration & oil/gas separation
Work-over costs (Well stimulation, wire-line operation, special operations, downhole
repairs
Secondary recovery costs (water inject, gas inject., chemicals)
Water production & disposal costs
Transportation Costs to a refinery or gas processing facility
Pump & Compressor fuel & losses
Pipeline Tariffs
Cost of operating terminals
Insurance Costs (Oilfield equipment insurance)
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Before Tax Model: Cash Outflow (Continued)
Cash Outflow is divided into the following categories: (Continued)
Abandonment Costs Environmentally safe abandonment of wells and
facilities
Sunk Costs Historic Costs incurred prior to first cash flow (Previous
exploration costs). Note that these have already been spent & accounted for
and do not appear in the cash flow projection.
Prior tax deductions due to depreciation, depletion or investment tax credits
will affect after tax economics only.
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Cost of Capital Calculation Discount Factor
Discounted Cash flow Techniques are used for project evaluation & Method
involves the following:
Forecasting future cash flows
Estimating appropriate cost of capital (Disc. Factor). Choosing the appropriate
Discount Factor can be as important as the estimation of future cash flows.
Determining the PV of future cash flows.
Compound Interest Calculation (Uses interest accrued on both the principal and the
unpaid interest earned in the prior periods.)
(1) Interest = [(1 + in / m)tm 1] x Principal
(2) Principal + Interest = [1 + in / m)tm x Principal where: in = Nominal Interest Rate (frac.)
m = compounding or interest
periods per year (1 - yearly,
2- semiannual, 4 - quarterly)
t = loan period, yrs
Example: $5,000 principal borrowed at a interest rate of 8%. Calculate the interest at the
end of the year if interest is compounded (1) yearly, (2) quarterly, (3) Semi Annually
(1) Yearly: Interest = [(1 + .08/1)1x1 1] x $5,000 = $400 (Prin. + Int. = $5,400.00)
(2) Quarterly: Interest = [(1 + .08/4) 1x4 1] x $5,000 = $412.17 (Prin. + Int. = $5,412.17)
(3) Semi Annually: Interest = [(1 + .08/2)1x2 1] x $5,000 = $408.00 (Prin. + Int. = $5,408.00)
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Nominal & Effective Interest Rate Calculations
Nominal Rate Compound interest is generally reported as nominal interest rate
per year.
Effective Rate The rate when applied to a principal balance once per year will
result in the same amount of interest as a nominal interest rate compounded m
periods per year.
Note that Nominal (in) and Effective (ie) interest rates will be the same if interest is
compounded annually.
For Periodic Compounding: ie = (1 + in / m)tm 1
For Continuous Compounding: ie = er 1 where: r = Nominal Continuous Interest Rate
Principal + Interest = (1 + ie)t x Principal
Example: $5,000 principal borrowed at a interest rate of 8%. Calculate the interest at
the end of the year if interest is compounded (1) yearly, (2) quarterly, etc.
(1) Yearly: Effect. Interest (ie) = (1 + in / m)tm = (1 + .08 / 1)1 1 = .08 or 8.00%
Principal + Interest = (1 + .08)1 x 5,000 = $5,400.00
(2) Quarterly: Effective Interest = (ie) = (1 + in / m)tm = (1 + .08 / 4)4 1 = .08243 or 8.243%
Principal + Interest = (1 + .08243)1 x 5,000 = $5,412.15
(3) Monthly: Effective Interest = (ie) = (1 + in / m)tm = (1 + .08 / 12)12 1 = .08299 or 8.300%
Principal + Interest = (1 + .08300)1 x 5,000 = $5,415.00
(4) Daily: Effective Interest = (ie) = (1 + in / m)tm = (1 + .08 / 360)360 1 = .083277 or 8.3277%
Principal + Interest = (1 + .08328)1 x 5,000 = $5,416.40
(5) Continuous: Effective Interest = (ie) = (er-1) = (e.08 1) = .08329 or 8.3287%
Principal + Interest = (1 + .083287)1 x 5,000 = $5,416.44
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Present Value of Future Revenue Based Upon Cost of Capital
Present Value of a single cash flow received at some future point in time
PV = Fv [1/(1+ie)t where: Pv = present value @time zero of future sum;
Fv = Future sum received @ time 0;
ie = effective interest rate (discount rate) based upon Cost of Capital Calculation
Present Value of periodic cash flows:
Pv = (Fv)1[1 /(1+ie)1 ] + (Fv)2[1 /(1+ie)2 ] + (Fv)3[1 /(1+ie)3 ] + + (Fv)t[1 /(1+ie)t ]
Time
0 1 2 3
CAPEX
1,700 2,000
2,200
4,000 Net Oper. Expenses
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Example AFE
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Federal Income Tax Model for Oil & Gas Transactions (Thompson & Wright)
Gross Income
(Units Sold x
$/unit) Delay Rentals
Operating Costs
State & Local Taxes
Less Interest on Loan
Allocated Overhead
Expensed IDCs
Dry-hole Costs
Depreciation
Taxable Income
Before
Depletion
Allowable Depletion
DEPLETION ITEMS
Less Leasehold Costs
Capitalized G&G Costs
Lease Bonus
Capitalized IDCs
Taxable Income
Taxable Income
Less Before adjustments
(Tax. Income * Eff. Tax Rate)
Less Investment Tax Credit
brought forward
Plus Adj. Due to Minimum
Net Income
After Taxes Tax Calculations
Taxes
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Example Before Tax (BFIT) Cash Flow Projection
First Year
Operation
Election to Capitalize or
Expense IDCs Made Yes
in Prior Years
Dry-hole Productive
Productive
Wells
Expense DHCs
Criteria:
(1) Independent Producers & Royalty
Owners Exemption w/ <= 1,000 barrels oil
equiv (6,000 SCF/STB)
(2) Regulated natural gas produced under
a fixed contract in effect 01/02/75
No % Depletion
Eligible
= Zero
Compute Adjusted
Yes Yes Basis (AB)
Take
Lesser Calculate Cost
Depletion
CD = AB[P/(Rr+P)]
Cost Depletion
% Depletion
Take
Greater
Allowable Depletion
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General Model for Fixed Assets Accounting
Depreciation Defined
Revenue expenditures are those incurred for normal wear and tear
expenses and are not capitalized but debited to expense accounts.
Capital expenditures, on the other hand, are those costs which
improve an asset or extend its life and are debited to the asset account.
Depreciation expense can be defined as the allocation of the cost of an
asset over its useful life.
In order the properly measure depreciation expense, one must
estimate the cost of the asset, useful life and its residual (salvage) value.
The adjusting entry to record depreciation takes the following form:
Depreciation Expense
Accumulated Depreciation
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Depreciation - Defined
Definition A loss in the value of asset over the time it is being used
(wear & tear, age, deterioration, & obsolescence).
Deductible non-cash expense for income tax purposes.
Not an actual cash outflow which would be subtracted from annual cash flow as an
expense.
Depreciation is discontinued when the cost or other basis of the property is recovered
or property is retired.
150% declining-balance method over the GDS recovery period for non-farm property in the 15
& 20 year property classes which switches to straight-line method when that method provides
a greater deduction.
Straight-line method over the GDS recovery period for non-residential real property in the 3, 5,
5, 10, 15 & 20 year classes.
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Asset Classes Depreciation Recovery (GDS MACRS) & Straight-Line Depreciation
Office furniture 7 yrs
Information Systems (Computers, storage devices, etc.) 5 yrs
Data handling Equipment (copiers, calculators, accounting machines, etc.) 5 yrs
Light Purpose trucks 5 yrs
Heavy Purpose trucks 5 yrs
Offshore Drilling (floating, self-propelled drilling barges, platforms, drilling equipment,
barges, towboats, crewboats excluding oil & gas producing assets 5 yrs
Drilling of Oil & Gas Wells (Assets used in drilling of onshore oil & gas wells, geophysical
services, chemical treatment, plugging & abandoning of wells, cementing, perforating for
Independent Producers only does not include integrated petroleum & natural gas
producers) 5 yrs
Exploration for and Production of Petroleum and Natural Gas Deposits (Assets used by
integrated petroleum and natural gas producers for drilling of wells, gathering pipelines,
storage facilities, offshore transportation facilities & storage, compression or pumping
facilities, separation facilities,) 7 yrs
Petroleum Refining 10 yrs
Pipeline transportation 15 yrs
Natural gas production plant 7 yrs
LNG Plant 15 yrs
Straight-Line Depreciation Depreciable cost or cost basis of the property is distributed
over the useful life of the asset.
D n = ( C Sv ) / n
where: Dn = depreciation in nth year, C = Total Cost of Asset, Sv = Salvage value, n = useful life
Example: Compute straight-line depreciation for a compressor acquired at a cost of $55,000
with a salvage value of $7,000 at its useful life of 5 years
Dn = (55,000-7,000) / 5 = $9,600/yr
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Declining Balance Depreciation w/ Example Calculations
Declining Balance Depreciation Fixed value of percentage is applied to the book value
(total value of asset less accumulated depreciation of previous years of the asset each
year.
MACRS Accelerated Depreciation method.
Appropriate when it is estimated that the benefits derived from an asset will decline with time.
Declining balance depreciation consists of the following percentages: 200%, 175%, 150%, & 125%
declining balance.
The fixed percentage is calculated by dividing the percentage by the recovery period.
Salvage value is not subtracted when calculating yearly deduction; however it is not depreciated
below its salvage value.
It is allowed to switch to the straight-line (SL) depreciation in the year when SL provides a greater
deduction over the declining balance method.
Fixed Percentage = Declining Balance Percentage / n
where: Declining Balance Percentage = Chosen Declining balance depreciation percentage; n = useful life
Example: Compute 200% declining balance depreciation and switch to straight line when
appropriate for a compressor acquired at a cost of $55,000 with a useful life of 5 years
Fixed Percentage = (200/100) / 5 = 0.40 Year 2 Calcs:
Straight-Line Depr. = (Book value @ Begin of Year 1)
(Depreciation Taken Year 1) / n
Straight-Line Depr. = (55-22) / 4 = 8.250M$
200% Declining Bal. Depr. = ((Book value @ Begin of
Year 1) (Depreciation Taken Year 1)) * Rate
200% Declining Bal. Depr. = ((55 22) * 0.400 =
13.2M$
Depr. Taken = 13.2M$ (200% Declining Bal greater
Str.Line
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Depletion Allowance
Definition Gradual exhaustion of the original amounts of the resources
acquired:
Available to an owner & operator if a legal interest in the oil & gas-in-place is
owned.
Each owner accounts for his portion of the depletion deduction
Figured separately for each mineral property acquired
Two ways of calculating depletion
Cost Depletion
Calculated by dividing the adjusted basis of the mineral property by the total
recoverable units in the propertys natural deposit. Then multiply by the resulting
rate by the units sold during the tax year.
Cost Depletion = AB [ Q / (Rr + Q)
where: AB - Adjusted basis for the taxable year; Q no. of units sold during the
year; Rr - no. of remaining reserves @ end of taxable year
Percentage depletion Not allowed for Integrated/major companies (> 1000 Bopd)
Calculated by multiplying a certain percentage (15% for independent producers) by
the gross income from the property during the tax year.
Depletion deduction cannot exceed 50% of the taxable income from the property
(excluding depletion deduction)
For a qualified independent producer or royalty owner of oil & gas (<= 1000 bopd),
percentage depletion cannot be more than the smaller of:
o Taxable income from the property without depletion deduction
o 65% of taxable income from all sources w/o depletion deduction
o If qualified for percentage depletion and is less than the cost depletion for any year,
cost depletion must be used for that year.
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Example Cost Depletion Calculations Major Oil Co.
Cost Depletion (2004) = (130.000 40.065) * (6.203 / ((40.276 18.616) + 6.203)) = 20.022 M$
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Depreciation Methods Typical Economic Model
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Accelerated Cost Recovery Depreciation
Example Depreciable Asset Value - $50,000 using Accelerated Cost Recovery Methods
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Example Sum-of-Years Depreciation Calculation
= 1/n where n=no. yrs to depr.) i.e. Seismic 1 yr, Drill 3 yrs)
i.e. Plant - .25 (4yrs)
Use of ratios computed over several years will not resolve timing
problem of expenditures made in one year and the results are
known in another; however are superior to single year analysis.
Historical
Proved Reserve quantity information
Future
A standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows
relating to proved oil and gas reserve quantities
Reserve Replacement Ratio (RRR) w/ Revisions & In-place sales = [Extensions &
discoveries + Improved Recovery + Revisions in previous estimates + Purchases of
reserves in-place] / [Production + Sales of reserves in-place]
Reserve Life Ratio (RLR) = [Total Proven Reserves at the Beginning of Year] / [Production]
Estimated Net Proved Crude Oil & Natural Gas Liquids (Equiv.)
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Reserve Cost Ratios - Finding Cost Ratios
Timing difference between the time the costs were incurred and the time
when the reserves are realized
Should be correspondence or matching between the costs in the numerator
and reserves in the denominator
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Summary Reserve Cost Ratios
Reserve
Replacement
Ratios
Finding
Cost
Ratios
Reserve
Cost
Ratios
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Lifting Cost & DD&A per BOE
Reserve
Replacement
Ratios
Finding
Cost
Ratios
Reserve
Cost
Ratios
Lifting Cost
& DD&A per
BOE
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Financial Analysis Ratios
Liquidity Ratios
Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities
Quick Ratio = Liquid Current Assets / Current Liabilities
Working Capital = Current Assets Current Liabilities
Profitability Ratios
Gross Profit Margin = Gross Profit / Sales
Operating Profit Margin = Earnings Before Interest & Taxes / Sales
Net Profit Margin = Net Income / Sales
Return on Stockholder Equity = Net Income / Total Common Equity
Return on Assets = Net Income / Total Assets
Cash Flow from Operations to Sales = Cash Flow Generated in the current Year / Current Year Sales
Price / Earnings Ratio = Market Value of Common per Share / Adjusted Earnings per Share
Cash Flow Ratio = Market Value of Common per Share / Cash Flow per Share
Asset Activity
Average Collection Period = Accounts Receivable / Average Daily Credit Sales
Inventory Turnover = Sales / Inventory
Total Asset Turnover = Sales / Total Assets
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Com
pan y Ba Com
lanc pan
e Sh y
eet Inco
me
Stat
e me
nt
Uncertainty Economics
Uncertainty Economics
Sensitivity Analysis
Investment Requirements
Operating Cost
Reserve Size
Producing Rate
Farmout Terms
Prices
Royalty
Timing
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Drilling Costs
Low High
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Risk of a Project
Probability of
Occurence
Project B
Project A
Reserve Level
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Decision Tree
Ps .4 Dry -200
+190 .25
Poor -40
DRILL
.35
Excellent +800
DO
NOTHING