Preng & Associates, the world’s leading executive search firm totally dedicated to the energy industry, today announced Steve Raben joined the firm as a Senior Consultant. He will be based in the Houston office.
Mr. Raben has led over 500 domestic and international client assignments for public and private Oil & Gas, Petroleum Equipment, Service and Hydrocarbon Processing & Transportation companies, at the Board, C-Suite and business segment leadership levels.
He joins Preng & Associates after a 30-year career in the search industry where he held leadership positions at three well-known executive search firms. Most recently, he founded and managed his own consultancy.
David Preng, President of Preng & Associates, said: “For 35 years, our practice has been built on the premise that the search process is most effective when conducted by professionals with significant industry experience. Steve’s extensive knowledge and expertise in the global energy industry is a tremendous asset to our firm and our clients. We’re excited to welcome him to the team.”
Raben said: “Preng & Associates client service, from London and Houston offices, includes conducting over 3,500 assignments with the majority completed in 90 days or less. Our consultants have previous employment with energy companies, such as: Ladd Petroleum, BHP, Shell, KBR, McDermott, Hamilton Bros., and a successful private equity E&P company. They excel in finding leadership overlooked or unknown to many competitors.”
Mr. Raben is a retired Military Intelligence Officer with decorated combat service in Viet Nam. He holds a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in (Economics and Business) from Southwestern University and completed courses toward a Master’s degree in Economics at The University of Texas. He is a Director of The Coronado Club (Houston) and Trustee of Southwestern University.
About Preng & Associates
Preng & Associates is the world’s leading executive search firm totally dedicated to the energy industry. For 35 years, Preng & Associates has assisted nearly 700 management teams and Boards attain exceptional talent who have delivered long-term value.
Preng & Associates President, David Preng, appeared on Fox Business News Opening Bell to discuss unintended consequences of the so-called U.S./OPEC market share battle, and how current management teams and boards are managing through the current commodity cycle.
Short Term Oversupply, Permian in the Pole Position
Oil & Gas 360® interviewed Stephens Inc. Senior Vice President E&P Research, Will Green, and Vice President E&P Research, Ben Wyatt, this week, in pursuit of their view of the current commodities cycle and related effect on the E&P space, looking at 2015 and beyond.
Oil and Gas 360® caught up with Will Green and Ben Wyatt by telephone at Stephens’ Fort Worth offices on Monday:
OAG360: How is the current oil price drop different from other cycles?
WILL GREEN: Today’s cycle is driven by supply/demand. This time the industry has to own up to the supply issue. The industry has to actively look at itself in the mirror in terms of admitting that it was involved in oversupplying the situation. The companies we cover are doing what they believe is the right thing for investors—growing production, growing revenues. But it’s prudent now to cut back to where hedges support you a little bit. It’s a hard decision, but they realize what needs to be shuttered and cut back. The prudent decision is definitely to cut back.
OAG360: What’s going to cause a bounce, what’s going to happen that shows the bottom?
WILL GREEN: I think one thing is this—actually getting some support from the demand side. It’s a good step in the right direction to see a reduction in production [and let some of the oversupply work itself out], but if we see continued economic strength in China, if China or other emerging markets blossom and demand remains strong, we should start to find support.
OAG360: What is Stephens’ deck calling for oil to be in 2015?
WILL GREEN: We just updated our deck today. We’re calling for WTI to average $53.75 in 2015, $67.50 in 2016 and $80 in 2017 and beyond. It’s a tad bit higher than strip. We are long term bulls on oil & gas: we believe this is a short term oversupply that fixes itself relatively quickly.
OAG360: If oil stays at today’s levels for a good while, what is going to happen to the midstream sector?
BEN WYATT: You’ll clearly see some slowdown. The midstream companies need the E&Ps to commit to capacity. They’re not going to build a spec pipeline, for example, without strong long term commitments from the E&Ps, and in this price environment it becomes more challenging. So it clearly dominoes.
OAG360: Which basins have the best upside for E&Ps?
WILL GREEN: From a wellhead economics standpoint, I’ll put the Permian in the pole position, the Eagle Ford second and the Bakken falls behind those. From an equity standpoint, the Bakken has sold off harder, so I would look at the Bakken as offering better values today. It was driven by consensus thought. The consensus thought was to shed the Bakken because of its higher differentials, so those operators have been sold way down, so there’s a lot of value there in the equities. But if you look purely at the wellhead economics in the core of the Permian, it can stand up to virtually anything in North America.
OAG360: Where does OPEC fit into the equation – how low can they let this go?
WILL GREEN: I think this downturn is really going to test their resolve. There are some troubled OPEC nations who are definitely struggling through this. It’s the Saudis’ M.O. not to cut production, and if their projects are economic they should keep producing, just like any other country or company would. If we’re still sitting here [at these prices] the next time OPEC meets, and Venezuela or some other OPEC nations can’t make their quota and if Saudi can’t take over a burden of another 1-2 million barrels a day, then you’ll see some price movement. If the planet needs 90 million barrels of oil per day, it’s the last barrel needed that sets the price. Ultimately if we have 90 MMBOPD that can be produced at $45 per barrel, then that’s the price. For now, investors are waiting until there’s more clarity around the demand side.
OAG360: What will M&A look like in 2015?
WILL GREEN: The balance sheets are center stage for this group [E&P]. On one hand you might have a more motivated seller because of their debt burden, but they’re not willing to sell unless they’re forced. From a buyer’s perspective, buyers are trying to maintain their balance sheets. If prices and activity get back on track later in the year, you could see offers, but right now there are dis-incentivized buyers and sellers.
BEN WYATT: I would add that a lot of these guys are well hedged, so you do have some time—maybe six months—but as we get closer to 2016 you might see some sellers who are more open to the idea.
Full Article: http://www.oilandgas360.com/oil-gas-360-exclusive-interview-stephens-ep-research/
Oil & Gas 360® had an opportunity to speak with John Gerdes about the oil and gas industry from his perch in Houston as KLR Group’s Managing Director and Head of Research. KLR is a merchant and investment bank, research house, institutional sales and trading firm that is focused on the natural resources and energy space. In this oil and gas interview, Gerdes brings to the table 30 years of oil and gas experience from his posts at Canaccord Genuity, SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Raymond James, Salomon Brothers, Jefferies & Company, Shell and ARCO. Gerdes holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and a BS in Petroleum Engineering from the University of Tulsa.
OAG 360: John, you’ve been in this business a long time and have seen fads, trends and cycles. Does the rapid downturn in crude oil prices feel any different than it did in 2008, 1998 or 1986?
JOHN GERDES: Well, in my 20s I was an engineer, in my 30s I was a banker and now as a researcher, it sort of all builds on itself. If we go back to ’86, that’s when I was coming out of engineering school. In the ’86 pullback, Saudi was tired of supplying everybody on the globe except themselves so they cratered oil prices. 1998 was more of a supply side reaction. 2008 had more to do with the demand side of the equation. We were seeing a softness in demand. Today, we’ve got all the dynamics at play and 500,000 to 1,000,000 barrels is the bandwidth of uncertainty in any given year.
OAG 360: What is different today about the industry than when you started your analytical career at Raymond James?
JOHN GERDES: The seeds were sewn in the fall of ’09 forward, and so we’ve seen a projection of growth for a few years now. The idea to create stability around a price that was equitable to all parties came from Saudi. We felt ’15 was the year. There’s a complete lack of cohesion in the Gulf States; we’ve seen a little more growth and the Saudis are acting a little more punitively than we imagined. OPEC has been driven by Saudi and the Gulf States. The other members are mostly window dressing. Saudi has sent signals they’ll put pressure on U.S. activity. The situation today is a hybrid—3 parts supply and 1 part demand—it’s a blend. You’ve got China in the equation too. China’s been running a surplus for many years; they’re comfortable running a deficit for 2 or 3 years now; their budget was $90-$95 a barrel oil. Tight oil growth is good through ’15 or ’16; after that there will be significant modification of growth in tight oil. The Saudis didn’t see tight oil as a long term threat.
Sophistication has evolved. We’d be using competitive advantage as a model if nobody put out any guidance. What we’ve got today is this:
- Greater granularity.
- The hedge fund industry grew up in this time.
- I think the evolution is toward more intensity: well-by-well NAV.
- Only a few companies develop per-well cost recovery concepts. Ultimately you can’t know cost and recovery, you have to look at what a company actually spends.
- We think the market is going to evolve away from that level of granularity.
- We look for a nudge toward a holistic market approach.
- We believe the market will internalize what you can test and observe—it’s an evolution to find the right framework to understand E&P models; we’re trying to do things based on how the market will internalize the situation.
- Here is one person’s perspective: we’ve all seen evidence that Initial Production rates are a poor representation of what a well can do. A 30-day rate has some explanatory power.
- How does the market internalize the risk of an acreage footprint? You have to look at depth of inventory and cost of capital.
- There’s one model that sees past next year: Pioneer – the market has given a value to a multi-decade depth of inventory.
- Dry gas in this market is death.
OAG 360: At what prices do you believe that crude oil and natural gas are at an appropriate premium to the marginal cost of production?
JOHN GERDES: You can look at the cost of supply by looking at tranches of capital. We focus on actual business execution. We see the Eagle Ford, for example, as breakeven at $60 oil—that’s a cash breakeven, not a 10% breakeven. The Permian at $70—again that’s a cash breakeven with no return in it—and the Midcontinent at $80. Through the lens of equity, the actual capital deployed in these plays—I can’t know a well cost and I can’t know a type curve: I don’t care if the cost is $8-$12 million to drill and complete a well; it’s a massive distortion between the marketing decks coming from every company. At $92.50 oil almost the whole industry is cash flow negative.
The cash breakeven is $73 oil, with no return. If we end up at $85 NYMEX, we’ll see a 10% activity reduction level. If it’s $80 NYMEX, we’ll see a 20% activity reduction level starting next year. $80 to $90 NYMEX, you’ll see adjustments over the next six quarters. I see conclusions suggesting the industry is free cash flow neutral at $90 oil and $4.00 gas, but if we stay sub-$90 we’ll see adjustments.
When you look at OPEC, what happens in their late November meeting? There is probably a likelihood of a middle ground [price] cut and that will slow down U.S. activity levels 10%. 2015 is already dialed in at a million barrels plus. We could see a move in the rig count from 1,600 oil rigs to 1,450 hit in early 2016, with an $85 per barrel NYMEX. At an $80 NYMEX, could be a 1,200 rig count, which would mean stalling growth. At a half-million barrels or less in U.S., oil growth becomes more muted and we’ll see firmness in prices. Saudi does not see $80-$90 Brent as equitable; they see the window as $100-$110 per barrel.
OAG 360: When U.S. LNG exports ramp up, how will that supply affect global markets and geopolitics?
JOHN GERDES: Well, for one, LNG in British Columbia is challenged; the cost of build-out is challenging. We don’t see anything in BC LNG in this decade; they need pipelines and infrastructure.
In the U.S., the regulatory climate is pretty well under control. You’ve got Sabine coming in 2015-16. Freeport, Cameron and Cove Point are the other export plants in the works; but you won’t see LNG exports from them until late 2019 due to the build. If you assume a $4 NYMEX environment and look at Cheniere’s pricing model, between the 15% premium and liquefaction charges of $3.00, charges to get the LNG through the Panama Canal, you’re looking at $12 or low teens to land the gas in Tokyo Bay. That relegates the Gulf Coast gas to a local spot market, and you’ve got to ask ‘what are the utilization levels?’ From 2019 forward you could see a market-altering pull forward, but Europe and Latin America are not the target markets; it’s Asia—China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. India is a next decade event. There has to be a massive cost absorption. There’s a tally of 4-8 Bcf with those four plants. And now China has thrown down a price with their Russian deal.
OAG 360: Looking out 30-years is natural gas a bridge to another low carbon fuel source, or is its place cemented as the world’s low carbon fuel, both for electricity generation and transportation?
JOHN GERDES: You can look at liquid fuel efficiencies. Wind is doing some interesting things. It’s a big part of low carbon growth globally, but I think we are a prototype: deemphasizing coal will be to the benefit of natural gas. When you look at natural gas for transportation, at the retail level it makes no sense. You’d need to drive the payouts inside of three years, really inside of two years to get rapid adoption. CNG costs creep up, but tractor trailer rigs is where it has the best chance – it’s a move away from diesel.
OAG 360: What happens if New York greenlights fracing—will it become another Pennsylvania, and how will the New York production affect the markets?
JOHN GERDES: I think New York is a complete non-issue. It won’t happen.
OAG 360: What impact do operators have on WTI or natural gas realized prices?
JOHN GERDES: This year about half of the gas growth is associated gas. Next year we’re going to be looking at 3 Bcf of associated gas growth, 2016 forward. If we drop a few hundred oil rigs out of the system, then we’re probably going to be looking at $4 – $5 per mcf gas prices.
OAG 360: If you were starting your own E&P company, which basin would you want to focus on and why?
JOHN GERDES: We are in the later innings as far as unconventional resource development. That went from 2009 forward. Maybe East Texas gas with a big liquids hopper. I think I’d be likely to take ownership of a company with a competitive quality asset and drive a unique culture, testing the way we model—think about the profit. I believe in a culture of openness, developing a tangible mission that we hold on to every day. We do that here. We change ratings more than five times more often than everybody else on the Street. We employ rigor. I’d take a Bonanza Creek, for example, and run it; get the culture really right and run it with a ruthless operational execution, with an incredible amount of measuring and benchmarking using real cash and economic markers.
In the Midcontinent, TMS and Utica, on the margin they’re going to be challenged to be competitive—Saudi is putting pressure on that right now.
Full Article: http://www.oilandgas360.com/oil-gas-360-exclusive-interview-stephens-ep-research/
Original Article at The Wall Street Journal
As the economy picks up, companies are starting to hire more. But managers often only get funds for a few key hires, so they have to select new employees wisely. That makes conducting a smart interview critical.
1. In what ways will this role help you stretch your professional capabilities?
2. What have been your greatest areas of improvement in your career?
3. What’s the toughest feedback you’ve ever received and how did you learn from it?
4. What are people likely to misunderstand about you?
5. If you were giving your new staff a “user’s manual” to you, to accelerate their “getting to know you” process, what would you include in it?
Read Full Article at The Wall Street Journal
Full original article at The New York Times
Research the company and the industry, says Adrien Fraise, founder of Modern Guild, which provides online career coaching to college students and high school seniors. “Know the major industry trends and news,” he says, and be able to talk about how they could affect the company.
Find out who runs the company and how they got there. “Look at their profiles on LinkedIn and see if you find a common bond,” says David Lewis, the chief executive of OperationsInc., a human resources outsourcing and consulting firm in Norwalk, Conn. “If you are able to say, ‘I went to the same college as you’ or ‘I also majored in psychology,’ that demonstrates you really did your homework.”
Q. What questions can you expect, and how can you prepare to answer them?
A. You may be asked to walk the interviewer through your résumé, so prepare concise, articulate anecdotes to illustrate what you did or learned in each experience you’ve listed, Mr. Fraise says. Highlight what you achieved and the skills you used — and how you want to keep using them. “Rehearse in front of the mirror and then in front of others,” he says. “Be so comfortable with it, it doesn’t sound scripted.”
Interviewers often ask questions like “Can you give me an example of when you had to work as part of a team or learned something new quickly?” Mr. Lewis says your examples might come from experiences in a club, fraternity or sorority. “Did you organize a membership push? Plan events? Do recruiting?” he says.
If you’re asked a question like “Why did you choose your college major?” be complete in your answer. “Don’t just say ‘because I really like psychology,’ “ Mr. Lewis advises. Instead, note from a business perspective why you liked the subject. “Maybe you found the classes to be informative about human behavior, which is a key to success in anyone’s business,” he says.
Take along samples of your work — whether from an internship, a class or an extracurricular activity — in a folder or on a laptop computer or tablet.
And always prepare questions to ask at the end of the interview, says Alexa Hamill, American campus recruiting leader for PricewaterhouseCoopers in Philadelphia. Questions on the interviewer’s own career progress are a way to conclude, she says: “What opportunities have been presented to them? How were they trained and developed? This shows you are looking at the job as something potentially long term.”
Read full original article at The New York Times
OGFJ recently spent some time with three Preng & Associates partners to discuss executive search and the looming talent shortage in the energy industry. The Houston-based firm specializes in energy placements.