Some highlights from the report:
“The most important in terms of potential scale is the shale oil play, Jolly Ranch, in eastern Colorado. This is broadly analogous to the Bakken plays in Montana and North Dakota and is a potential company maker. In 2009 Schlumberger estimated the P50 oil-in-place fir around 2/3 of the Jolly Ranch project at 1.46 billion barrels of oil equivalent gross. There is the potential for positive news flow in 2010 reflecting the drilling programme, 3d seismic surveys and an anticipated upward trend in production from nominal levels in 2009 to possibly over 1000 barrels a day gross in the coming months. The Revere waterflood project in Kansas/Missouri could also see significant production gains in the 2010 driven by development activity,”
“We see scope for a pre-tax profit of £0.5m on sales revenues of $3.1 m based on an average production rate of 140 boe/d. There is inevitably a degree of uncertainty about the outlook for 2011 and 2012 but we believe Nighthawk should be comfortably profitable at the EBITDA and probably the pre-tax levels based on our production forecasts.”
“As of end of January 2010 we believe the cash balance was about $17m which is adequate to comfortably finance the current development programme”
“We believe the key items of news in 2010 will relate to rising production, particularly at Jolly Ranch. With this in mind, it is likely that there will be regular updates on production probably at the end of each quarter. Near term in late February and March, we also believe that there will be news surrounding the following issues: Jolly Ranch seismic survey results along with potential new drilling targets, Jolly Ranch operational update, Revere operational update including the status of production and resources at Xenia”
“Currently we believe production is running at about 360boe/d gross or approaching 200boe/d net. A sharp increase in production is anticipated in the coming months. This reflects intensifying well test and development work at Jolly Ranch and Revere. We believe that it is possible that gross production across the JV could be running at about 1,250boe/d by end of 2010 and perhaps 1800boe/d by late 2011.”
“Jolly ranch has the potential to be a highly lucrative project. The pre-tax netback could be in the region of $50/bbl after allowing for royalty payments, severance costs and the cost of logistics and lifting. Assuming a cost per vertical well of $1m and production per well of 100b/d, the pre-tax payback period would be 200 days. Allowing for state and federal tax the payback would be 333 days. “
“WTI (West Texas Intermediate) oil would probably have to fall below $35/bbl before a prospective Jolly Ranch project would hit approximate fully accounted break even. On a variable cost basis, break-even might be around $25/bbl.”
“Assuming a similar success rate to that achieved historically (Revere - on the Devon and Buchanan properties), it would not be surprising to see production up to 300bpe/d gross by end 2010 and perhaps 400boe/d by end 2011.
“Since July 2009, Nighthawk has traded between 27p and 48p/share. Trading at around 36p in the second week of January 2010,Nighthawk was up by about 33% from a depressed base at the end of 2008. This was a major underperformance compared with the approximate 122% gain in the AIM Oil and Gas Price index over the same period. The weak performance over the past year or so, we believe, largely reflects heavy cash calls combined with disappointment at the pace of bringing production on stream and defining the reserve base. Oilfield development however, is a time consuming and costly task even in a favourable operating environment and requires patience. Given that production will probably gain momentum in the coming months, investor perceptions could turn considerably more positive during 2010. Ultimately we believe that a decisive change in perceptions will require evidence of a substantial reserve base, as indicated earlier. When this happens or arguably somewhat before, the larger independents are likely to become increasingly interested in Nighthawk/RFP or in particular assets owned by the joint venture. “
“Nighthawk’s current market cap of about £91m is in large part under pinned by the Cisco Springs project plus the investment portfolio alone. The independently assessed 2p reserves of 24mmboe, along with the installed production and logistical infrastructure, should be worth at least $5/boe based on sector data. Allowing another £2m for the portfolio and the implied valuation for the other projects is a mere £12m”.
Source: Edison Investment Feb 15th 2010
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