No. of Recommendations: 20
WHY NOT O&G? IS IT THE IEA WORLD ENERGY OUTLOOK?
This topic has some relationship to BRK. BRK has holdings of OXY and CVX. In addition, O&G is a large industry that could provide investment opportunities for sizeable amounts of BRK’s cash and cash flow. However, it’s much more pertinent to me because XOM is my second largest holding beyond BRK. It may be of interest to some of you.
The industry isn’t attracting much investor interest beyond those seeking dividend yields and buybacks. And most companies are concentrating on providing these to shareholders rather than growing their businesses. This shows in capex, XOM excepted. And Buffett isn’t investing even at prices below his original investments. And these haven’t done well.
Why isn’t the industry attracting investors? I’ve continued to try to understand this. In the following I’ll share a possible major reason. Fair warning – it’s a long post. Skip if this topic isn’t of interest.
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I got one solid lead from a June presentation by a senior VP of XOM in a “fireside chat” at the J P Morgan conference. The transcript is available. When asked about the outlook beyond 2030, he replied:
“I think this is probably the biggest issue that is out there in terms of modeling our company, valuing our corporation, because a lot of models from some of the sell-side analysts have a terminal value around 2030 in that time period that’s negative for us. So, the extent that we've talked about our earnings growth out to 2030, there's models – to get to our current valuation, you have to – if you accept that 2030 growth, you have to start saying we're immediately going to start declining from there, we'll immediately start reducing earnings, losing cash flow from there. And nothing could be further from the truth. We are very focused. We have our plans locked and loaded out to 2030. Like I said, we'll be flexible, we'll be opportunistic, but we have really good, solid plans out to 2030. It's not a target. It's a plan.”This reflects maybe the general view of O&G analysts. That the O&G industry will peak early in the 2030’s and decline thereafter. That leads to a negative terminal value for DCF projections and devalues all O&G companies. I. e, current stock prices reflect a declining long term outlook.
I’ve tried to dig deeper into the source of this view. It seems to be based on the International Energy Outlook (IEA) recent World Energy Outlook (WEO). It presents scenarios which, they conclude, all point to reduced demand for oil beyond 2030. When combined with announced outlooks for new oil supplies coming on, they conclude that the world will be oversupplied by that period. That will reduce prices, O&G cash flows, and result in a declining industry.
My obvious next step. Try to understand the WEO. In so doing, I found this detailed critiques of the WEO:
https://energyanalytics.org/wp-content/uploads/202...It is very detailed (32 pages) and addresses some 23 assumptions embedded within the WEO that the authors question as being reasonable. Some are considered dangerously misleading.
The Intro to the article provides the following:
“For decades, the International Energy Agency (IEA) was the world’s gold standard for energy information and credible analyses. Following the commitment of its member governments to the 2015 Paris Agreement climate accords, the agency radically changed its mission to become a promoter of an energy transition. In 2022, the IEA’s governing board reinforced its mission to “guide countries as they build net-zero emission energy systems to comply with internationally agreed climate goals.”
The IEA’s current preoccupation with promoting an energy transition has resulted in its signature annual report, the World Energy Outlook (WEO), offering policymakers a view of future possibilities that are, at best, distorted and, at worst, dangerously wrong.”There’s too much to summarize it all. But in studying their critique, I found at least five major assumptions in the WEO scenarios that make me question this as a political document, not a reasonable projection of the future outlook for O&G.
1. They assume the Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS) as their base scenario. These are the policies that governments agreed to implement following the Paris Agreement on climate change. The other scenarios are more stringent – down to zero emissions by 2050. The WEO no longer include a BAU (Business As Usual) scenario. Yet this is the scenario that’s actually happening. The BAU leads to higher O&G needs by the 2030’s. This is not brought up in the WEO. It used to be before the policy change. The WEO doesn’t address the most probable outlook.
2. They assume that growth in O&G demand in underdeveloped countries will be offset by energy efficiencies in developed countries plus reduced O&G use in transportation. That includes not only EV’s for light transportation but even electrification of heavy trucks, airlines, and marine transport. There is no reasonable case for the latter, and declining support for the former in the USA and Europe. Of greater importance, they don’t assume significant improvement in the standards of living in underdeveloped countries. This will require energy, and fossil fuels still provide the most economic combination of high energy content, ease of transportation + distribution, and cost. Will they choose climate change over economic growth?
3. Re electrification, WEO assumes no real restraints in either supplies or costs of the materials and minerals needed for the rates of electrification assumed. Studies say otherwise. Windmills are made of plastics, cement, and steel. All need fossil fuels to manufacture because of high temperature requirements. And mining operations are heavy users of fossil fueled energy.
4. They assume 5-6% percent annual declines in existing fields. Yet newer production has much higher decline rates – ranging from 28% in the Permian to 13% in Brazil. XOM estimates the current decline rate to be closer to 15% without annual investments. This is a KEY point in projecting future oil supply needs.
5. WEO assumes that the needed finances to achieve the STEPS actions will be provided. These are being reduced rather than growing. Supports for EV’s are being withdrawn and many smaller O&G companies are pulling back on capex, favoring dividends and buybacks. Albeit, Shell and BP are reversing course on O&G. Are they now seeing a future different than WEO?
In contrast to WEO, XOM also puts out an annual energy outlook to 2050. This is their best estimate of what will ACTUALLY happen based on government actions, economic growth, technology advances, etc. et. al. This is no political document. It forms the planning base upon which they invest $25-30 billion a year in the future. It is not an aspirational scenario, it is the base outlook for the business. They then use higher and lower scenarios to stress test investments.
No economic outlooks are accurate – but they should reflect reality as much as possible. Below are the final comments from the critique executive summary:
“Debating the intricacies in flawed assumptions about energy scenarios is no mere theoretical exercise. The IEA’s legacy reputation continues to influence not only trillions of dollars in investment decisions but also government policies with far-reaching geopolitical consequences. The promotional aspirations and flawed assumptions underlying IEA’s peak-demand scenarios have serious implications, given the obvious global economic and security considerations in planning for and delivering reliable, affordable energy supplies. The IEA is damaging its long legacy as the world’s leading energy security watchdog by offering dangerously misleading outlooks.”*******
Industry analysts and investors are supposed to be knowledgeable concerning the industry and the economic factors impacting it. So why would they be impacted by the WEO?
Being pragmatic, the SAFE course for industry analysts is to base outlooks on WSO scenarios. That provides good butt cover. The IEA is supposed to be the gold standard for evaluating the industry. (And it was prior to 2015, and especially the 2022 report.) Is this still true?
Conversely, there’s a case to be made that O&G could provide a significant added opportunity for investors to build a long term portfolio at reasonable prices today. Both Vickie and XOM executives have stated that they believe their stocks are significantly undervalued. XOM has been doing $20 billion a year buybacks without moving the market. How much could BRK do?
What seems to be happening is a “wait and see” strategy in an increasingly uncertain world. At what opportunity cost?
Just sharing some info and thoughts. As a note, I've also asked myself if the critique document I reference is over stating its arguments versus the WEO. In some cases, perhaps so. But I think I understand this area well enough that I accept the position of the article.