Three Upstream MLPs with the Discipline to Succeed in the Coming Recovery: RBC Analyst John Ragozzino
Source: JT Long
of The Energy Report (4/29/15)
Are you ready for $74 per barrel oil? In this
interview with The Energy
Report, RBC's John Ragozzino tells us he's anticipating
a V-shaped oil price recovery that could bode well for upstream master limited
partnerships, the companies that invest in oil and gas assets and have been hit
hard by lower prices. He has followed MLPs through the highs and lows, and he
knows which had the strength to hedge at the right times and which are liquid
enough to take advantage of growth opportunities that could be right around the
corner.
The Energy Report: John, oil and gas prices have rallied a
bit recently. Have we established a bottom?
John Ragozzino: Yes. In our recently published Global
Energy Research "Commodity Price Revisions" report,
we are calling for a meaningful V-shaped recovery beginning in the back half of
2015 and into 2016. This is not significantly different from our prior
forecasts, as we adjusted our price forecasts to $54 per barrel ($54/bbl) from
$53/bbl in 2015, and from $77/bbl to $74/bbl in 2016.
Our thesis on crude
oil is largely predicated upon a deceleration of non-OPEC supply growth, as
we've seen the U.S. onshore rig count drop by more than half over the last five
or six months. Additionally, we are seeing a growing inventory of uncompleted
unconventional wells, as operators defer completions to an environment of
better pricing and higher returns. When you combine these two factors with a
global demand picture that calls for roughly 1.0–1.1 million barrels (1.0–1.1
MMbbl) of annual demand growth over the 2015–2016 time frame, it doesn't take
long before the global oversupply situation is largely eroded and we find
ourselves back in a state of equilibrium. I think that will be the meaningful
catalyst that gets us to higher prices in 2016. Our long-term deck remains
unchanged at $84/bbl West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and $90/bbl Brent.
On the gas side, I
wouldn't say that statement holds quite as well, because we continue to see new
lows on Henry Hub natural gas prices. We can probably expect a continuation of
anemic demand growth until the middle 2015, at the very least. That should mark
the beginning of a phase of meaningful coal generation retirement, which could
result in 2–3 billion cubic feet per day of additional demand. It's not until
2017 and beyond that we begin to see some meaningful changes on the gas demand
side, with liquefied natural gas exports ramping up.
TER: Based on your new commodity price
forecasts, what's the risk profile of upstream master limited partnerships
(MLPs)?
JR: The upstream MLPs are at an elevated
risk profile relative to historical levels. At the end of 2014, we believe the
upstream MLPs were at a peak risk profile, as prices had been rapidly cut in
half immediately after 18 months or so of market backwardation, when many
management teams got ahead of themselves and veered off the well-beaten
strategy path of robust hedging and price risk aversion measures. Most upstream
MLPs typically follow a rolling three- to five-year commodity price
risk-aversion strategy that includes the use of fixed price swaps and costless
collars to mitigate exposure to price volatility. Many upstream MLPs today are
well below their preferred hedge levels due to the temptation to wait for
better pricing during that long period of backwardation.
Management teams
reluctant to take a $15-$20/bbl discount for their production volumes two to
three years out held off on hedging at the worst possible time, as they saw
prices cut in half as opposed to the forward curve simply returning to a normal
state of contango. When the price continued to fall, a lot of companies that
were crude oil-weighted effectively became victims of their own temptations.
Today, upstream MLPs
are looking healthier after cutting distributions and making meaningful
reductions in spending plans for 2015. Capital preservation is the main theme.
The passage of the spring redetermination period also lifts a material overhang
on the group in general. Everyone has sobered up mighty quick in light of
reduced oil prices. The outlook for distributions and spending profiles is far
more sustainable than what it looked like going into 2015, which goes a long
way to reducing risk compared to levels seen in late December and early
January.
TER: How do you identify an upstream MLP that
meets your investment goals?
JR: It's really pretty simple. A lot of
naysayers argue that producing assets in the upstream model don't fit into the
MLP structure, because the MLP holds a declining asset that must support a
distribution profile that is steady in the worst-case scenario, and ideally
growing over the long term. Those two things inherently don't match. But when
an MLP employs a disciplined hedging strategy that mitigates commodity price
risk, and follows a simple strategy of minimal spending on organic project
development while using the cost of capital benefits that the MLP structure
potentially affords to grow the business via accretive acquisitions, there is
absolutely a place for upstream companies in the MLP structure.
Longer term, I believe
that the maturation of the resource base in the U.S., concurrent with a period
of such vast discovery on the unconventional side, has led to a thirst for
capital by the exploration and production (E&P) C corporations. This has
facilitated a symbiotic relationship between the upstream MLPs and the
E&Ps, and resulted in widespread divestitures of many mature, shallow
decline-type assets that were likely not getting much appreciation from C-corp
investors. Those are the ideal assets for an upstream MLP because they have
very low decline rates, low capital intensity levels and, ultimately, they're
far more suited to sustaining a distribution in the long term.
As far as what we look
for in specific companies, balance sheet health and liquidity position are at
the top of the list. I also look carefully at the asset profile. Ideally it
should be a diverse mixture of commodity products. You don't want to be overly
levered to oil or gas. There was a time when it was cool to be 100% crude
oil-weighted, but you can see how quickly that turns when prices are cut in
half. So a diverse production profile is important. A quality asset base,
meaning low decline rates (10-12%), and low capital intensity, are also
important. Finally, I look for a strong management team, one that is well
aligned with unit-holder interests.
TER: What is an example of a company that meets
your criteria?
JR: Linn Energy LLC
(LINE:NASDAQ) is a turnaround story that, 18 months ago,
was probably dealing with upward of a 23% annual production decline rate on a
year-over-year basis. Through a series of large divestitures and asset
acquisitions, Linn has been able to wear that down to something more along the
lines of 15% or so. Something in the 10–12% range would be ideal, but the
company is moving in the right direction.
Management has also
strategically positioned itself to take advantage of both organic development
opportunities and potential acquisition & development (A&D) opportunities
by partnering with large private equity partners such as GSO Capital Partners
(Blackstone Group L.P.) and Quantum Energy Partners.
The bottom line is
that this company should be able to continue to grow production and,
ultimately, cash flow, without being so heavily reliant upon the traditional
public debt and equity markets. Once Linn's balance sheet is de-levered to a
more comfortable level and distribution growth is able to resume, the stock
will be more attractive to investors. A healthy balance sheet and sustainable
distribution growth is ideally what investors are looking for, and this should
drive capital appreciation through yield compression.
TER: Linn made almost half of all the
acquisitions made by upstream MLPs since 2008. How is it finding synergies,
cutting costs and integrating all those companies?
JR: On the operations side, Linn's
operations and asset integration team is second to none. The team has
effectively created an acquisition machine. Over the last 18 months, the
company significantly turned the asset base over, taking a high-decline asset
base with a lot of production and undeveloped acreage in unconventional plays
such as the Granite Wash and the "Hogshooter" and, through a series
of asset swaps and divestitures, moved out of these plays and into plays like
the Hugoton Basin. These plays are far less sexy and fun to watch, but they
make a lot more sense for the upstream MLP model. For a company its size, Linn
is actually quite nimble.
TER: You aren't worried about the cut to its
shareholder distribution?
JR: Only a handful of companies in the group
have not cut their distributions at this point. In light of the sector-wide
lack of hedging, I see cutting distributions as a sign of being proactive and
realistic about the world we now live in, rather than of weakness. Linn was the
first to cut its distribution in January. It may have been a bit early, but it
was the right decision. Others followed suit soon thereafter.
TER: What other upstream MLPs are you
following?
JR: Another name we like is Memorial
Production Partners LP (MEMP:NASDAQ). The thesis is pretty
simple. It is one of the only names that remained disciplined throughout this
period of volatility and falling commodity prices. On top of that, the company
has had a good run in the acquisition market, growing quickly and efficiently.
It has taken its largely natural gas-weighted production profile and turned it
into a much more diversified product split. Most importantly, Memorial is one
of the most aggressive hedgers of the group, managing a hedge book that extends
well into 2019. Management stuck to the script: It removed all the emotion from
the decision-making process and followed the playbook as it was written. That
is paying off in the stock price, compared to a lot of its peers.
TER: Memorial just did a redetermination and
reduced the borrowing base by 9.7%. Is it still liquid enough to take advantage
of acquisition opportunities?
JR: The conservatism demonstrated in
Memorial's hedging strategy has allowed the company to preserve a far healthier
balance sheet and liquidity profile than a lot of its peers. Plus, the company
was lucky enough to tap the equity markets right before the crack of the
commodity and entered the redetermination season with close to $900 million
($900M) in liquidity. The expectation going into the redetermination was for a
10–15% reduction in the borrowing base. For a company of its size and with
nearly $1 billion on hand, there is plenty of room for an adjustment of the
borrowed base to the tune of about 9%. This move leaves Memorial well
positioned to remain quite opportunistic for any emerging A&D
opportunities.
TER: Is there a third company you wanted to
talk about?
JR: The only other upstream MLP that we are
currently recommending is EV Energy
Partners L.P. (EVEP:NASDAQ). This name is largely natural
gas-weighted, but the company recently announced the divestiture of its Utica
East Ohio midstream project for $575M in cash to Williams
Partners L.P. (WPZ:NYSE). That was a very attractive price in
our opinion, providing the company with a meaningful booster shot of liquidity
to the balance sheet. This cash is going to allow EV Energy to pay down all its
revolving debt and ultimately emerge as one of the best-positioned upstream
MLPs for future A&D.
We are getting to a
point where the bid-ask spread on producing assets is settling down and is
likely to find some sort of equilibrium soon. I expect the acquisition activity
to pick up in H2/15 and 2016. Those companies with additional dry powder to
exploit A&D opportunities are going to be able to outperform their peers.
EV Energy Partners will be sitting on $650M in cash. The addition of a mature,
producing asset worth $500M or more could do a lot to reshape its current asset
base, diversifying it into a more balanced product split, and ultimately
yielding significant accretion to distributable cash flow per unit. This should
help move the company back to its original strategy, which was a traditional,
steady state of distribution growth. Following the path of most of its peers,
EV Energy's early February distribution cut and reduced capital spending
outlook leaves the company in a healthy position currently. I would like to see
it get back to a sustainable 3–4% distribution growth number, and I think that
this divestiture and reinvestment process is likely the catalyst to do that.
TER: What about other parts of the MLP space?
Do you have other companies we should be watching?
JR: The one name that I follow in the
refining and specialty products business is Calumet
Specialty Products Partners, L.P. (CLMT:NASDAQ). This company is
largely viewed as a refining name, which in the current environment is being
helped by a favorable fundamental tailwind given the rally we've seen in crack
spreads over the last couple of months.
But if we go back to
the end of 2014, it was a different story. The stock bottomed out at about
$19-and-change/unit in late 2014, almost simultaneously with a bottom in crack
spreads. Then crack spreads skyrocketed almost $10/bbl in less than a week,
kicking off a strong rally in Calumet units. There has clearly been a lot of
momentum behind units. I admit, we missed the opportunity to upgrade Calumet at
its lows. However, following a secondary offering in mid-March, the stock
pulled back over 14%, and we decided to get more aggressive on the premise that
the fundamentals in the refining market were certainly reflective of better
things to come on the refining side of the business.
With Calumet, however,
the most important thing to focus on is the specialty products side of the
business, as opposed to the refining side. While the fuels business is in a
good fundamental state right now, and the company does employ a risk mitigation
strategy that uses hedges, similar to an upstream MLP, to lock in refining
margin, it's a commoditized market and very volatile.
On the specialty
products side of things, Calumet produces some 5,000 different products and
distributes to customers all over the world. These are very high-margin
products with extremely sticky pricing. This means these products benefit when
we see a reduction in crude oil prices—products like WD-40 or Royal Purple
automotive lubricant. These products are ubiquitous and don't fluctuate with
changes in oil prices. Just in Q4/14 alone, the company posted a record gross
profit per barrel on the specialty products side of the business, a quarter
during which we saw an average WTI crude price north of $70/bbl.
The Street has largely
put the company in the penalty box over the last two years, just because of
weak operating performance on poorly timed maintenance downtimes for the
refineries, digestion of acquisitions and cost overruns—things that were
outside Calumet's control and one time in nature. Now that is cleared up, and
we have a clear look at the business and what it can do going forward. I think
that we're going to see Calumet outperform its historical levels of operating
performance and exceed estimates.
I think we are in the
early innings of Calumet's upward trend and strong financial performance on the
specialty products side of the business. Additionally, after the recent
offering, the company has secured the necessary funding to complete its
pipeline of organic growth projects, which should contribute nearly $140M in
additional EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization) per year over the next 12 months or so. Once the remaining capex
on these projects is completed, we expect the company to resume distribution growth.
TER: What final words of wisdom do you have
for investors already in the MLP space, or curious about getting into the space
this year?
JR: A fairly negative sentiment is still
lingering around the upstream MLP space. I would say that there certainly is
opportunity to be had in the sector right now, but given the underhedged
profile of a lot of the upstream names—and the uncertainty that surrounds the
commodity market—investors still need to be cautious about their investment
decisions and can't be tempted by some of the attractive yields out there. They
need to do their homework and make sure they're making prudent decisions and
looking for the higher quality names. Selectivity will be key to picking
winners versus losers over the next 12–18 months. Like I said earlier, it's
going to come down to those companies that are well situated in terms of their
liquidity position, balance sheet health, hedge profiles, production diversity
and, ultimately, staying power.
If we see our price
deck come to fruition, and there is a meaningful V-shaped recovery, and we find
ourselves back upward of $77–80/bbl by the end of 2016, then it's a bit of a
different story. The situation would be more universally attractive. But until
that happens, the best-of-breed investment strategy will ultimately win.
TER: Thank you for your time.
John Ragozzino, CFA, joined RBC Capital Markets in 2012,
bringing with him more than nine years of experience in institutional equity
research. He has followed a number of different sectors including media,
entertainment, gaming, and most recently energy. Ragozzino has remained focused
on the energy space through his coverage of various subsectors including oil
and gas exploration & production, upstream master limited partnerships
(MLPs) and oil and gas royalty trusts, the latter two of which he currently
covers as one of RBC's three analysts dedicated to the broader MLP space.
Before joining RBC, he worked in institutional equity research for a number of
large and mid-size investment banks, including Robert W. Baird, Stifel Nicolaus
Weisel, Wells Fargo and BMO. He holds a bachelor's degree in business
administration (finance) from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is a
CFA charterholder.
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DISCLOSURE:
1) JT Long conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee. She or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: None. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) John Ragozzino: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or co-managed a public offering of securities for Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the past 12 months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP with investment banking services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP with investment banking services in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates expects to receive or intends to seek compensation for investment banking services from Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the next three months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Linn Energy LLC with non-securities services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Linn Energy LLC with investment banking services in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Linn Energy LLC in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or comanaged a public offering of securities for Linn Energy LLC in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or comanaged a public offering of securities for Memorial Production Partners LP in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Memorial Production Partners LP in the past 12 months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Memorial Production Partners LP with non-securities services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Memorial Production Partners LP with investment banking services in the past 12 months. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts' statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports' terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.
1) JT Long conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee. She or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: None. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) John Ragozzino: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or co-managed a public offering of securities for Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the past 12 months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP with investment banking services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP with investment banking services in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates expects to receive or intends to seek compensation for investment banking services from Calumet Specialty Product Partners LP in the next three months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Linn Energy LLC with non-securities services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Linn Energy LLC with investment banking services in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Linn Energy LLC in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or comanaged a public offering of securities for Linn Energy LLC in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates managed or comanaged a public offering of securities for Memorial Production Partners LP in the past 12 months. A member company of RBC Capital Markets or one of its affiliates received compensation for investment banking services from Memorial Production Partners LP in the past 12 months. RBC Capital Markets is currently providing Memorial Production Partners LP with non-securities services. RBC Capital Markets has provided Memorial Production Partners LP with investment banking services in the past 12 months. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts' statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports' terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.
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