This thread is intended solely as a place to discuss analysts' notes on SOCO.
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SOCO International plc is an international oil and gas exploration and production company. The Company has oil and gas interests in Vietnam, which includes Block 9-2 and Block 16-1; Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), which includes Marine XI Block and Marine XIV Block, the Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa), consists of Nganzi block and Block V and Angola, which include Cabinda Onshore North Block. The Company's operations are located in South East Asia and Africa. It holds its interests in the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), through its 85%-owned subsidiary, SOCO Exploration and Production Congo SA (SOCO EPC). It holds its interests in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa) through its 85%-owned subsidiary SOCO Exploration and Production DRC Sprl. Te Giac Trang (TGT) field’s Phase I production began on August 22, 2011. Total production net to its working interest from continuing operations, during the year ended December 31, 2011, were 5,437 barrels of oil equivalent per day. more »


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OK - looking through Merrill/BOA's note, they start by pointing out that SOCO has been seriously unloved (only 13% of analysts with Buy recs, the lowest in the sector) and worst-performing E&P YTD (+17% vs. sector +72%) and they now think that this discount should unwind as newflow picks up. They talk about the 25% discount to NAV as being a "Compelling valuation". They use $75 long-term Brent and $1.65 assumptions:
They go on to point to all the well-known factors re TGT and TGD and M&A, and note that production at CNV should be soon ramped from the present 12k boepd to 20k boepd thanks to water injection and then note that the market gives little credit for Congo at present.
Interestingly, I'm not sure that Merrill fully understand the potential of the West African assets either, as they are very vague on the Nganzi prospects and they also say they "would not be surprised" to see SOCO farm out there. I wouldn't be surprised either, but as some of us heard first-hand, the technical team are urging the risk managers to drill WITHOUT farming down - which is a first! I note they suggest the Nganzi WI is 38%....which it is not. Block 5 is 38% though........ ;-)
Their drilling schedule summary also points to a "gross" potential of 100mn bbls from the next HPHT well in VN. Again, as we know from the AGM, this is perhaps the (conservative?) truth in relation to that fault block - but it certainly isn't the WHOLE truth, as success with that well would substantially derisk the rest of the fan!
On the M&A point (per the various discussions we've had on the boards about whether a deal MUST wait for a further well on TGD), Merrill make the interesting comment that:
...my bold. As you know, it has been my view for a long while that it may well not be ESSENTIAL for a further well to be drilled - and that if a bidder waits until the well is drilled, then a success will very definitely put the asking price up (and attract other bidders). So I'm certainly not ruling out a deal being done before (subject to price - which I still think would need to be £25+ based on the current state of development of the VN assets).
Re TGT they say initial production in 2011 will be 40k boepd ramping up to 100k plateau (confirming previous indications) and note that:
Curiously they say that:
......which appears to be assuming all the bonds get put. Merrill must know where the bonds are trading, surely??? [I assume that they are now very close to or even over par, given the recent run-up?? Anyone got the exact current level?]
And (astonishingly IMO) they ascribe only 211p per share in their 1651p NAV to risked exploration upside, with 282p of risked development and 1159p core (including (only) the initial production rates at TGT from 2011). It seems to me (from their comments on the HPHT area and Nganzi) that they could easily double their risked explo numbers if the company did indeed drill Nganzi without farming out and if they fully explained the derisking impact of the "100mn bbl" well on TGD.......and I'd expect both of those to be made clear to analysts by October, if perhaps not in next week's interims.
ee
ps...... There is little doubt IMO that many investors have exited the stock on the back of analysts' recommendations. It'll be interesting to see what happens as they try to get back in. I'd be unsurprised if the shares were back at £20+ by year-end, irrespective of any M&A news.
In reply to emptyend (post #1).
I'm told that the convertible was 99.78 this morning (I think that is probably the bid side, but it might be the offer....my informant wasn't clear).
ee
Merrill's note said...
In fact I understand that the Lyeke well is now scheduled to spud on 19th August. Even allowing for SW10's Law, this should give a result in the early part of September, following which there is likely to be an analysts meeting ( ie when they're all back from holiday etc).
A spud on 19th August would be consistent with the indication given a few weeks ago and reported here: http://www.stockopedia.co.uk/forum/view/28022/interim-management-statement?comment=14#14 - but is rather earlier than some will have assumed (including Merrill, rather puzzlingly!!!)
Similarly, there is no basis for the assumptions Merrill appear have made about farming down in Nganzi. That remains a possibility - but it is also quite possible (as present) that SOCO drill the wells next year with the full 85% stake. No decisions have been taken - so the outcome might well depend on whether the potential farminees have anything attractive to bring to the table.
ee
Following yesterday's immediate analysts' reactions to the interims, summarised here, some of the analysts seem to have been revising their views a bit following the conference call (and no doubt being corrected on a number of evident misunderstandings!).
One such (still somewhat confused) analyst note is out today from Citi - though is does also contain some useful snippets:
IMO this sort of reluctance to understand the company properly goes a long way to explaining why Citi were replaced as a broker to the company, especially when one looks at the details of their unrisked upside estimates for the upcoming campaign:
Marine XI 2009 wells.....139p
Next TGD well..... 146p
Marine XI & XIV 2010 wells.......167p
Nganzi.....1464p
I wouldn't quibble too much with the Marine XI/XIV estimates, though I have seen others that are double the above.......however, they have 1464p against Nganzi unrisked - and put a mere 15p per share into their risked NAV [thus utterly overlooking SOCO's own assessment of the CoS in Nganzi and the possibility that they might drill without farming down, despite the company considering reducing to a 30% operating interest]. As for the thought that the next TGD well has potential for only 146p of added NAV, I'm afraid that they will be forced to make a major revision to that figure when the seismic reprocessing has been finished and they can be led (by the nose) through the consequences for derisking the TGD fan.
ee
JP Morgan have also had a go and have confirmed several of the points made by Citi re TGT development etc.
In addition, they say:
There was also an interesting comment on the planned TGD well :
I've emboldened the key bits here! I've always suspected that they may continue drilling at TGD if the first well goes to plan - and we may get a better steer on that in the next month or so when more details of the reprocessed seismic become available! As for the potential for a sale in Vietnam, you'll note that the word "unlikely" denotes a small amount of uncertainty!!
ee
It is worth comparing Citi and JP Morgan in respect of the estimated unrisked figures for the upside from the upcoming drilling campaign [nb - slightly edited shortly after my initial post]:
I suggest that JPM have a much better handle on the TGD upside than Citi appear to! However, despite that, I see that their upside figure for TGD is based on a mere 594mn boe gross figure for the potential of TGD - which IMO is potentially itself a large understatement (given the guesses being tossed around at the AGM.....guesses which I'd expect to see being firmed up at the next analysts presentation when they can go into more detail (post seismic reprocessing) about the sizing of the TGD fan and associated prospects in the HPHT area!).
The jury is obviously deservedly out for now about the potential upside scope of Nganzi (where the slight delay to drilling arises from the need to build access roads in after the rains end in May) - but all the analysts currently assume they will farm down and will get nothing in return (other than some costs covered). That may not turn out to be the case - and if they turn down the farm-in offers and drill it on their own, then I think there will be a sharp turnaround in analyst excitedness! And, I'd suggest, if they DO farm down then there is likely to be some fairly interesting entry to other acreage that would have been eased thereby........
Finally, having sorted though the various comments of analysts after these results, I'm fast coming round to the view that analysts really haven't got a grip on the company at all. It reminds me of the 2002-5 period when SOCO were barely being covered by analysts and such comments as were published castly under-estimated the value of the company (according to my own spreadsheets). In recent years I've not bothered with keeping my own spreadsheets on the NAV, as the analysts eventually seemed to get a handle on the company and their valuations converged with my own.....but I'm so underwhelmed by the current attempts at "analysis" that I may have to start doing my own again.
ee
Hi EE
how did you manage to get those vertical lines? I thought that wasn't possible here?
T
In reply to emptyend (post #6)
I'm fast coming round to the view that analysts really haven't got a grip on the company at all.
How much of that is down to SIA management either deliberately not giving them the right steer, failing to give them the right steer, or analysts just not doing their job properly?
In reply to tiswas (post #8)
I'd say that about 80% is down to analysts not doing their jobs properly (usually by not understanding or incorrectly interpreting what they have been told....horses to water etc) and about 20% is because the company are only telling them the parts of the story that can be backed up by hard evidence (deals done, holes drilled etc) and are being deliberately conservative in what they are saying about the upside potential, pending the emergence of what analysts might consider to be decent evidence.
The main area where this impinges at present is over TGD and the HPHT area, where they are guiding primarily based on the 100mn bbl fault block that is the principal target of the next well but are unable to say anything much about the potential upside from the fan, pending the final seismic reprocessing runs.
An analyst doing a proper job IMO should be asking about the bits that the company management are not (yet) advertising....much in the way that shareholders asked similar questions at the AGM! Analysts are MUCH too keen to focus on providing conservative estimates of NAV (eg by ignoring anything that isn't being drilled in the next 6 months, or leaving ALL of the exploration assets out of their formal NAV completely!) - what I think they SHOULD be doing is providing their best estimate of the value of the company.....where such a "best estimate" is equally likely to be too high as it is to be too low! Their present methodologies (which have regressed slightly in recent years, it seems) provide a systematic bias against any company with exploration upside, causing investors to under-value them.....which is one reason why E&P companies will continue to be taken over by people who look at the complete value of companies and not just "whats gonna be revealed in the next 6 months"!
ee
ps tournesol - try the table feature on the toolbar