I guess I don't see drill and frac as much and as quickly as possible as true growth. This strategy maximizes revenue, not profit margin, during booms but doesn't protect profit margins during slow downs. Hedging is not growth either.
quote:it is a very different business, but should it be? is that cultural?
What Einhorn is learning is that the oil and gas business is fundamentally different than other industries. We have decline rates, we need to develop reserves. In his world, forward projections are taking the last quarter's cash flow and multiplying it by 4 to forecast next years.
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I guess I don't see drill and frac as much and as quickly as possible as true growth. This strategy maximizes revenue, not profit margin, during booms but doesn't protect profit margins during slow downs. Hedging is not growth either.
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EOG set to resume frac ops if prices stabilize at $65
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That seems like it will be a bit self defeating to me as opening the floodgates on the frac inventory at a stabilized 65 will likely cause downward pressure on the oil price. Then we will get to do this all over again....
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That seems like it will be a bit self defeating to me as opening the floodgates on the frac inventory at a stabilized 65 will likely cause downward pressure on the oil price. Then we will get to do this all over again....
quote:quote:it is a very different business, but should it be? is that cultural?
What Einhorn is learning is that the oil and gas business is fundamentally different than other industries. We have decline rates, we need to develop reserves. In his world, forward projections are taking the last quarter's cash flow and multiplying it by 4 to forecast next years.
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But how is a commodity based business supposed to be stable without spending money? Obviously there is a difference between wasting money and investing money into development, but how else does an O&G company make money unless it's by producing?
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Rosetta is/was well positioned to be an acquirer.
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Noble acquiring Rosetta?
quote:Rosetta probably looked at the situation and decided there was a significant chance they couldn't weather the storm. so, they do a deal now before the real rush of acquisitions and valuations drop farther.
They certainly didn't have the best balance sheet out there but they were in a better position than a lot of other E&P's that should/could be sellers now. They have a strong management team too, one that seemed ready to weather the cycle and capitalize on opportunities.