Some of the easily identifiable considerations to plug into your model are the depressive effects of slowing population growth and international agreements to use force to further the stranded assets argument, the inflationary effects of a reduction in the total resource and more particularly in the lower cost plays and the could-go-either-way interplay of price and regulation in the development of alternative transportation and whether Saudi Arabia asks Pakistan to lend them 60-70 nukes until their domestic nuclear development program gets going.
Then there are the unknown unknowns.
From Barron's:
When financial markets are in turmoil, it’s
difficult to think about where stocks might be three years out, but
that’s what a disciplined contrarian investor should do.
When financial markets are in turmoil, it’s
difficult to think about where stocks might be three years out, but
that’s what a disciplined contrarian investor should do. This column
doesn’t pretend to know precisely when oil prices will turn up or by how
much.
Our best guess is that energy
prices are in for an extended weak period, perhaps lasting years. That’s
beneficial for consumers of gasoline and other petroleum-based
products, but not so good for shareholders of decimated energy
companies. After dropping 60% since the summer of 2014, oil prices may
yet go lower in the near term.
Yet the rules of the investment cycle haven’t changed.
We’re
already a year into falling crude prices. At some point the natural
industry reaction will begin in earnest: a significant contraction of
production. Just as supplies of crude oil—cue the fracking music—came
gushing out of surprising new discoveries over the past decade in
response to oil prices that soared to triple digits, supply will
contract—eventually.
The Oil Patch
shakeout is under way, with marginal suppliers going bust and the weaker
getting bought by the stronger. This is an economic law that can’t be
repealed. Last week,
Schlumberger
(SLB) announced it would buy
Cameron International
(CAM) in a deal worth nearly $15 billion.
Many
energy stocks are down 40% to 60% from highs. Their near-term outlook
is poor, medium term a little less bad. Admittedly, and unfortunately,
this column has been too early with energy picks over the past 12
months. Our endorsements of Schlumberger and
Transocean
(RIG) have been particularly painful so far, down 25% and 17%, respectively, since publication of our views.
The
sting of oil at $40 per barrel, and the threat it might go lower, makes
it hard for investors to remember that crude was significantly above
$60 per barrel for the vast majority of time over the past decade.
Ironically, as oil prices fall, the better things are, long-term, for big, high-quality oil companies such as
ExxonMobil
(XOM). Exxon will be in a position to buy struggling companies
with good assets, and it will be a survivor when the supplies of oil
currently awash around the world are absorbed a few years hence....
MORE
Between now and then we actually prefer the oil services companies for the annuity-like certainty that they will be asked to re-frack a whole bunch
of U.S. wells drilled over the last decade and smaller E&P cos. who actually have a chance to build reserves by putting holes in the ground.