Sabine Oil & Gas files for bankruptcy
July 15 reuters.com
Oil and gas company Sabine Oil & Gas Corp filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Wednesday, becoming the latest victim to the decline in global oil prices. The company said it was in discussions with its lenders and debt holders on a financial restructuring plan. Sabine Oil expects to support itself with its cash on hand and funds generated from ongoing operations. The company listed assets and liabilities of more than $1 billion. The case is in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, Case No: 15-11835.
(Reporting by Ankush Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Anand Basu)______
Before lunch I got an Internet alert that EXCO shares were down to $0.87. After lunch they were $0.86. At the end of trading they were $0.83. They have probably already received their notice letter from the NYSE giving them 90 days to get the share price back above $1 or they will be de-listed and then become a Pink Sheet, penny stock. I hope they can recover but now is the time for all lessors faced with the possibility of their operator taking bankruptcy to begin discussions with their neighbors about taking legal action to protect their royalty income or have their leases terminated. Skip
Tags:
Gale, Samson has not filed yet. They have announced publicly that they intend to do so.
You're welcome, Gale.
Stock price: XCO (NYSE)
$0.51 -0.02 (-4.29%)
August 5, 2015 at 4:05:01 PM EDT
Stock price: GDP (NYSE)
$0.72 -0.16 (-18.18%)
August 5, 2015 at 6:19:04 PM EDT
Stock price: CRK (NYSE)
$1.19 +0.19 (+19.20%)
August 5, 2015 at 4:01:29 PM EDT
Stock price: HK (NYSE)
$0.98 -0.04 (-3.92%)
Aug 5, 4:06 PM EDT
Stock price: GDP (NYSE)
$0.75 +0.00 (+0.54%)
August 6, 2015 at 4:06:36 PM EDT
Stock price: XCO (NYSE)
$0.59 +0.07 (+14.36%)
Aug 6, 5:24 PM EDT
Stock price: CRK (NYSE)
$1.59 + 0.40
Stock price: HK (NYSE)
$0.97 -0.01 (-1.01%)
Aug 6, 4:03 PM EDT
Wholesale Spot Petroleum Prices, 8/06/15 Close
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|||
Product |
Area |
Price |
Percent |
Crude Oil |
WTI |
44.69 |
-1.0 |
Brent |
47.80 |
-2.5 |
|
Louisiana Light |
48.44 |
+0.4 |
A lot of members have Internet access but don't follow the trajectory of commodity prices. This discussion thread is about reminding them to keep up with what is happening with their operators and to make plans to take action in the case of a bankruptcy filing. Yes, it is a bummer. However it is reality and a potential problem for mineral lessors who need to be prepared to act in order to protect their mineral interests. The chance that GHS members may have to deal with this issue is increasing daily.
More potential bad news for these companies. In the "Overheard" column of the 8/8/15 WSJ it talks about how Carl Icahn now has a 8.2% stake in Cheniere Energy and that he may want the company to scale back its expansion plans, so less NG turning into LNG.
Also from the article. A year ago NG for 2017 avg. $4.25 and implied cost to deliver LNG to Asia was $10.59, but Brent futures were $100 implying an Asian LNG price of $15 and hence a healthy margin. Today with Brent's collapsed the implied spread is a negative 44 cents
Thanks, tc. I've seen similar break downs for US LNG economics. I have occasionally posted that global LNG pricing will become increasingly competitive as significant domestic tonnage enters the market. The US will have a number of competitors who have low NG prices and lower transportation costs to some of the major global end users. I think your example illustrates quite well the fact that the economics have already shifted quite far from when the decisions were made to build US LNG export facilities.
There is another challenge for a sharp and significant recovery of domestic NG prices. A "V" shaped recovery would require a significant increase in demand and a lag in supply to meet that demand. The prospects for global economies improving that much in a short span of time appear extremely unlikely. The US economy is one of the few that has largely recovered from the global recession and some major countries are still on the decline with China being the main example. One of the great advantages of shale gas, and oil for that matter, now seems to have become another challenge to price support. In the past conventional production with modest initial flows and flatter decline characteristics would take some time to catch up to demand. With unconventional gas and oil energy companies can ramp up supply much more quickly. Right now IMO one of the starkest prospects weighing on future crude prices is how much new production will be stimulated by very modest price increases. There are many basins that with improved recovery methods now provide attractive ROIs at $55 to $65 a barrel crude. As any future increase in oil demand causes prices to rise even modestly companies will rapidly ramp up drilling programs and supply will catch up to demand over a much shorter time span.
Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
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