SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : Rat dog micro-cap picks... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bucky Katt who wrote (43248)11/26/2010 6:27:10 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 48461
 
Flurry of Rig Orders Marks End of Two-Year Drought

Dow Jones Newswires via Rigzone Nov 25, 2010 rigzone.com

Since the start of October, drilling companies have ordered at least 17 new rigs, a wave of spending that signals optimism that oil prices will remain high and that producers will continue to demand the latest advances in equipment as they tap increasingly hard-to-reach offshore reservoirs.

Largely built "on spec"--that is, without an existing contract from an oil and gas explorer--those orders mark a clear ending to a two-year drought in rig purchases as drillers like Transocean, SeaDrill and Atwood Oceanics look to update and bolster their fleets.

The move also indicates how the global enthusiasm for exploiting offshore oil and gas continues, despite the slowdown in U.S. drilling that came as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

Of the 17 orders so far this quarter, 13 are for jackup rigs, which stand on legs and typically operate in water depths up to 400 feet. By comparison, only eight jackups were ordered in the two years that ended Sept. 30, according to Tom Curran, senior analyst with Wells Fargo Securities' Oilfield Services & Drilling team.

The quarter's four orders for floating deep-water rigs, which can take three years or more to construct, are the first shipyards have seen since 2008, Curran said. The orders primarily have gone to yards in Southeast Asia.

Curran said some of the recent rise can be attributed to pent-up demand that has "sprung to life" with improved financing and construction costs that have fallen by as much as 20% since 2008. But most of the orders are intended to address arising demand and rejuvenate aging fleets, Curran said.

"There's a clear need for more rigs with the capabilities of those that are being ordered," he said.

The so-called "high-spec" jackup rigs that are being ordered are different from older models in that they have more storage space for supplies, can carry more pipe needed for deeper and horizontal wells, and offer more drilling torque.

All told the global jackup fleet of 466 includes 338 rigs that were built before 1990, according to energy analysts Tudor Pickering Holt & Co.

Those older rigs are increasingly losing work to newer rigs, which producers are choosing both because they need the added drilling power and because they offer efficiencies, according to analysts. A rig with more storage space, for example, can mean savings through fewer supply boat trips.

Atwood Oceanics has ordered a pair of $190 million rigs and inked options to buy three more, at the same time it idled three of its older rigs. "We did not see attractive prospects for any of these rigs materializing in the next year," Atwood Chief Executive Robert J. Saltiel said in a conference call last week.

Like other companies, Atwood Oceanics cites the widening gap between the dayrates of newer rigs and those of older ones in placing its orders. Saltiel said he expects the new rigs to bring in between $130,000 and $150,000 per day once deployed in 2012.

While some of the recent rig orders have been placed by smaller companies, including a pair commissioned by privately held Houston upstart Prospector Offshore Drilling, the sector's largest players are also pushing to modernize their fleets.

Last week Transocean announced that it had hired a Singapore shipyard to build it a $195 million jackup.

And SeaDrill said it had ordered two shallow water rigs that will cost a combined $380 million. That announcement came four days after the company said it ordered a pair of $600 million deep-water drill ships and about a month after it contracted for two $200 million jackup rigs.

Ultimately Bermuda-based SeaDrill has the option to add two more deep-water drill ships and six additional shallow-water rigs to its orders.

Nearly every recent jackup order has come with an option to add more rigs to the contracts. And signs point to several more orders in the coming months.

DryShips of Greece on Tuesday announced that it has an agreement with a South Korean shipyard to potentially build it four $600 million deep-water rigs. Curran said he expects Brazil's state oil company Petrobras to order nine of its proposed 28 new deep-water rigs before year's end. And analysts with Barclays Capital said in a recent study that companies in India and China are planning orders.

Meanwhile companies like ENSCO and Noble are unlikely to sit out the ordering frenzy, the Barclays analysts said, "We expect the traditional drilling contractors are increasingly considering newbuilds as these companies are having difficulty picking off assets from smaller, non-traditional owners."



To: Bucky Katt who wrote (43248)11/26/2010 10:00:22 PM
From: SteveinTX  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 48461
 
You promised a long list, and as usual, you were true to your word.

Everything from butter futures to weather futures (whatever they may be).



To: Bucky Katt who wrote (43248)11/29/2010 9:02:05 AM
From: BW  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 48461
 
Hurricane Second Event Seasonal Maximum Binary Options CME Globex
CME Globex
Gulf Coast MG2 CME
Florida MF2 CME
Southern Atlantic Coast HM2 CME
Northern Atlantic Coast MR2 CME
Eastern U.S. MX2 CME
Cat-In-A-Box

How the heck do you make a profitable trade in Cat-In-A-Box second event binary hurricane options? <ggg>