Oil/Gas Engineering Industry: Improved Earnings, Rising Stock Prices
I'm pleased to bring you a report on the oil/gas engineering industry written from the perspective of someone who has more than 40 years of experience working for major oil corporations as well as smaller companies all across the globe.
Robert Williams has extensive petroleum, water and electrical industries experience regarding Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems, Management Information Systems (MIS/IT), Distributed Control Systems fire & gas/emergency shutdown systems, instrumentation, metering, communications, security/CCTV and electrical engineering on such major projects as Shell Bonga FPSO, Saudi Strategic Storage Project, Libyan Water Pipeline, Trans Alaska crude oil pipeline, Alaska Natural Gas Transportation System, Occidental Piper B and Saltire offshore platforms and many other worldwide projects.
This is the inauguration issue of the Oil & Gas Industry Perspective published with the express purpose of keeping you abreast of industry trends and developments and to potentially identify investment opportunities. Industry sectors involved are the Integrated Companies, Services and Equipment Companies and Operations Companies. All these industry sector companies are involved with future developments capital expenditures either for exploration, production, distribution or for technological advancements.
Not included in these Oil/Gas industry sectors is one industry which is highly involved with oil and gas developments. This industry is the engineering companies that are listed under engineering because many are also diversified into environmental, power, federal government, pharmaceuticals, nuclear and life sciences engineering projects.
Future Oil & Gas Industry Perspectives will address these sectors as well as major equipment and systems suppliers that specialize in these industries since they are also improving earnings due to the tremendous investments occurring in this industry. These future Industry Perspectives will have the express purpose of identifying potentially profitable investment opportunities.
The following summarizes some of the major engineering companies who are extensively involved in oil and gas engineering projects. These companies are identified as Engineering, Procurement and Construction or EPC. Their engineering projects are phased into Front End Engineering Design [FEED] and detailed engineering with follow on into field construction activities which include installation, startup and commissioning. Some of these engineering companies will also contract for operations and maintenance.
Industry Perspectives
1. All across the world major oil companies,
Exxon (XOM), Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A), Chevron/Phillips (CVX), Marathon (MRO), etc. and Middle
East national oil corporations, e.g. Kuwait are all in various degrees
of revamping their existing refineries with the express purpose of
increasing overall refining capacity, and where necessary, adding heavy
crude oil refining capability.
2. Major capital expenditure projects are financed by the continuously
increasing crude oil prices. Current crude oil prices are sufficient to
provide a return on investment and, in most cases, the necessary capital
is already justified and committed to the refinery expansions. Refinery
revamp projects are currently ongoing in California, Texas, Louisiana,
Michigan and other states. Front End Design [FEED] and Engineering
Procurement Construction [EPC] contracts have been placed with
engineering contractors who have specialized skills to complete these
projects.
3. Specialized skills include positive experience on similar projects,
project management capability, project control systems with competitive
rates and qualified engineering, procurement and construction
personnel.
4. In 1982 there were 301 refineries in the USA but in 1992 there were
only 199; 2002 only 153 and in 2007 the number of refineries was down
to 149. Crude oil pricing went the opposite direction from $18.91 in
1990, to $23.17 (Jan, 2000); $28.00 (Jan, 2004); $35.16 (Jan, 2005);
$55.12 (Jan, 2006); $54.63 (Jan, 2007); $94.44 (Nov, 2007), and January
2008 100 ++?? (Source: US Energy Information Administration) [www.eia.doe.gov]
5. Gasoline refining in the US has not kept up with demand with the
shortfall being made up by imports with an estimated current import of
1 million barrels. A good size refinery is about 250,000 barrels per
day of crude oil.
6. No new refineries have been built in the US for the past 25 years.
7. Refined products consumption will continue to increase as will the political pressure for gasoline imports independence.
8. During the 80’s and 90’s the oil/gas industry suffered a major
downturn and no major projects were initiated to replace older
equipment and technology. A result is the ongoing maintenance shutdowns
for US refineries.
9. Similarly, the major oil/gas companies and the EPC engineering
contractors divested themselves of professionally qualified and
experienced engineers of all disciplines. Newly assigned engineering
projects are being partially staffed from returnee engineers, retired
engineers and new graduate hires. A major experience gap exists in
staffing these projects.
10. During the industry downturn there was a trend toward lump sum
contracting for global capital projects. This trend has now reversed
back to the cost plus reimbursable projects.
11. An EPC contractor does not make any major capital expenditures for
the refinery revamp engineering projects, since they only provide the
necessary business requisites to supply experienced project managers
and engineering personnel and supporting infrastructures, of buildings,
computers, networks, etc.
12. One EPC contractor outlines the backlog of engineering contracts
of up to five years without any new contracts being granted.
13. Domestic refining capacity is expected to grow based on the
current capital expenditure projects to revamp existing refineries but
this will be offset by increasing consumption. Is this another refining
industry overbuild? It may very well be, but this will not become
apparent for quite a few years until these refinery revamp project
deliver the increased production capacity which could be utilized to
reduce crude oil and petroleum products imports rather than flood the
US market.
14. In previous years capital investment was directed to lower carbon
emissions and to meet low-sulfur regulations. These environmental
investments do not expand capacity as the currently ongoing revamp
projects will as they are also designed to increase heavy crude oil
refining, i.e. Canadian tar sands.
The oil/gas engineering companies combined performance charts (see chart) positively indicates that profits are being made and that it is not too late to invest in these companies. All are indicating increasing earnings and the Insider Perspective from three to five years of backlog are recorded by these companies.
Backlog means that they would be busy for three to five years to complete existing client-approved capital expenditure projects without consideration for any new projects being negotiated or bids under preparation. Please note that recent markets declines do affect these companies’ stock pricing, but may very well provide excellent entry points depending on your market timing criteria. Weekly charts provide trend direction determination whereas daily or even 60-minute charts provide guidance as to trade entry points.
In summary, the oil/gas engineering industry is currently investing on crude-oil dependence growth which is a fundamental sign for improved earnings and rising stock prices.
Disclaimer: No position is owned in any of the companies written about above.
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