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Super-Spiked Videopods (EP8): Live from St Andrews
Description
A 9 minute live update and videopod from the Home of Golf and site of the 150th Open Championship in July. Nine points to match my handicap index to highlight some of the key takeaways from this trip and recent research. And on the handicap, I started playing golf when I stopped at Goldman in 2014. I am happy with the progress I have made.
Back to energy, nine takeaways:
* First, as an American, thank goodness for the combination of US shale oil and gas as well as Canadian energy production. We are balanced in supply/demand for oil and a natural gas exporter. That is not the case here in the UK or Europe more broadly where a climate only ideology has run rampant. To be clear, I support decarbonization efforts. But they cannot come without due consideration for energy availability, affordability, reliability and security...none of which really exists here in the UK or Europe.
* Second, I suspect the relative maturity of the North Sea means greater investment spending and less hostility from local enviro extremists wouldn't materially change UK or European balances. We are already seeing the early signs of a greater desired co- operation for more American LNG. Both US gas and crude oil as well as Canadian energy are part of the solution to wean Europe off its dependency on hostile nations.
* Third, in the US oil and gas development can co-exist with climate & environmental progress while also recognizing we need to ensure energy is available, affordable, reliable and secure. We do NOT need to gut climate & enviro regs. But we do need the political class to basically walk and chew gum. We need to push back against American pipeline and infrastructure obstructionism while striving to make American and Canadian barrels and MCFs methane free and ultimately net zero on Scopes 1 and 2.
* Fourth, on the sector. I am realistic about the short-term-ism that comes with the institutional investor dominance of the sector. I expect commodity prices to be super volatile this decade and during times of weakness, perhaps recession related, it would be normal to expect corrections, potentially meaningful corrections, to occur. But if I could simplify it, energy troughed at 2% of the S&P 500 in October 2020. It is now back to 4%. Based on its expected 2022 earnings share, it should get back to 7% of the S&P...and in my view in the coming years will get back to at least 10% of the S&P.
* Fifth, on a long-term basis, despite the sharp rally off all-time lows, the sector is still very out of favor. Returns on capital are on-track to be sustainably better than last decade, free cash flow and returning cash to shareholders has replaced production growth as the competitive lens, balance sheet strength is returning, and the wrong mindset that this is a sunset industry, especially in the USA and Canada is simply wrong. US and Canada are about 23 mn b/d of a 100 mn b/d oil (liquids) market. We should be the last barrels produced and a much larger share of the energy pie going forward.
* Sixth, there is still very little competition for capital in traditional energy. Euro Majors are out. Mainstream private equity is sitting out this funding cycle. NOCs and IOCs are going in different directions. Whose left to invest and when do they come back?
* Seventh, with no competition and still lots of doom and gloom about the ultimate fate of traditional energy, and what is on-track to be a multi-year possibly decade long energy crisis era, I think it is about as interesting of a time as I can remember for new capital formation. If you have a good idea, AND, can find a sponsor, it's an interesting time.
* Eighth, we all owe a big thank you to oil and gas industry workers. Go visit an oilfield or refinery. These are not easy jobs. They require hard work and strict attention to health, safety, and the environment. On Wall Street, we mostly interact with senior management. They too are needed. But make no m