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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11477)6/26/1998 3:46:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURS. JUNE 25, 1998 (4)

WORLD CRUDE

Oil Prices in Asia Offer No Reward to OPEC for Cut

SINGAPORE, June 25 - Oil prices in Asia showed no signs on Thursday of rewarding OPEC for its promise to cut supplies by 2.6 million barrels per day (bpd) from July, oil traders said.

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed in Vienna on Wednesday to drain supply by 1.355 million bpd, more than doubling an earlier set of cuts agreed in March, to bolster sagging prices.

World oil markets though gave a sceptical response to the news, suspecting that the fractious oil group would find it difficult to deliver the cuts.

New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) August crude futures closed in New York overnight at $14.60 per barrel, up eight cents on the day, but down 15 cents from the day's high.

The sell off continued in Asia with the same contract last traded at 0620 GMT at $14.42, extending the losses by 18 cents.

Brent crude futures in London shed 31 cents to $13.61. The same contract was untraded on the Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX).

John Russel, managing director of Bangkok-based Petroleum Economics Ltd (PEL), said: "If the agreement is fully implemented it should be sufficient to support prices.

"But there is a degree of scepticism, particularly with regards to Iran, as to whether or not these production cuts would be fully implemented."

Traders said the cuts were largely factored into prices before the announcement. The market now needs evidence the cuts are being implemented to start pushing prices higher, they said.

"People are just taking a wait-and-see attitude. The agreement doesn't mean a chunk of oil supplies disappears from the market immediately, as the cuts will be implemented from July," said a trader in Japan.

"And even after that, it would take time to drain bloated oil tanks in oil-importing as well as oil-exporting countries."

But analysts said the dilemma facing OPEC and other producers is that they face a moving demand/supply picture, compared with previous years when growth was relatively set.

Asian demand, which has accounted for half of the world's demand growth in recent years, has slumped leaving forecasters expecting only flat consumption this year.

Supply has been growing, but if Asian demand continued to slide, OPEC could well have to cut again, traders said.

"The basic problem for OPEC in their job of trying to manage the market, is that it is getting progressively difficult," PEL's Russel said.

But for this year, OPEC can look forward to the onset of seasonal winter demand, which could be enhanced by increasing expectations that the demand friendly La Nina weather phenomenon will follow the waning El Nino.

The El Nino weather pattern inspired a warm north Asian winter, curbing consumption further, while the La Nina is characterised by abnormally cold ocean conditions in the eastern equatorial Pacific.

"If production cuts are implemented from July, crude oil prices will recover, and (prices) can be expected to rise with the approach of the winter demand season," Japan's Nippon Oil Co President Hidejiro Ohsawa said in a statement.

Oil Markets Ignore OPEC Cut, Pundits Applaud

LONDON, June 25 - Sputtering global oil markets failed on Thursday to respond positively to OPEC's jump-start effort and fell despite the cartel's pledge to cut world supplies by a hefty 2.6 million barrels per day.

International benchmark Brent reacted coolly to the OPEC deal, sagging to $13.48 in early Thursday trade and then extending the losses in the afternoon to $12.99 before closing 49 cents lower on the day, at $13.12 a barrel.

Many analysts saw the promised cuts, to take effect from July 1, as just the spark markets needed to achieve long-term recovery although some suggested a recovery would not be seen before proof of implementation.

Thursday's price decline flew in the face of a bail-out plan announced on Wednesday by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which promised to trim supplies in order to lift oil prices from their lowest level in 12 years.

Oil traders, who had already been expecting OPEC cuts, pointed to OPEC failures to fully adhere to cuts in the past, and were less than impressed by both the size of the reduction and the credibility of the cartel's vows.

While markets scoffed, however, analysts were singing OPEC's praises and suggesting the cuts could be enough to secure higher prices.

"It was a fantastic meeting for oil prices," said Merrill Lynch oil analyst Constantine Fliakos.

"This is a lot of oil to take out of the system and I think we are going to see an inventory drawdown in the third quarter because of the agreement," trading sources quoted Fliakos as telling an internal briefing with Merrill equity advisers.

Other analysts pointed to the duration of the promised cuts, more than the size of them, as the key to long term price recovery.

"The duration of the cuts is one year," said Leo Drollas of the Centre for Global Energy Studies.

"When you get into 1999, especially if you have a cold winter, the call on OPEC is going to exceed (the group's) production levels, even with a bit of slippage, so we're talking about some pretty hefty kicks upward in the price if they stick to these kinds of figures," Drollas told Reuters Television.

Oil prices are floundering well below last year's average of $19.32 a barrel, and petrodollar revenues of many major oil producers have collapsed.

Prices were on an upward trend until last November when OPEC raised output just as Asian demand was fading, oil storage tanks were swelling and the West basked in unusually warm winter weather.

Some oil company executives echoed analysts' sentiments, saying that OPEC's latest remedy, together with normal seasonal demand patterns, could lift the beleaguered oil price back to its feet.

"If production cuts are implemented from July, crude oil prices will recover, and (prices) can be expected to rise with the approach of the winter demand season," Japan's Nippon Oil Co President Hidejiro Ohsawa said in a statement.

Prices in dollars per barrel:
..............................................Jun 25 Jun 24
IPE August Brent.....................13.12 13.61
NYMEX August light crude.....14.00 14.33

NYMEX CRUDE

NYMEX Crude, Products Retreat On Supplies

New York, June 26 - Crude oil futures prices retreated Thursday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, sending a message to world oil producers that pledges of deep output cuts must be fulfilled to end a supply glut and boost prices from near-historical lows.

Crude oil resumed its recent slide one day after members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed in Vienna, Austria, to the third round of production cuts this year in an effort to combat falling prices.

The oil ministers, holding their summer conference, agreed to remove 1.38 million barrels of oil a day from the market beginning in July.

Analysts have said world oil producers must slash at least 3 million barrels a day from daily exports to see prices rise significantly, and the new agreement brings the total from all producers to 3.3 million barrels, or 4.4 percent of daily consumption.

But many market participants are skeptical that individual countries will stick to their new export quotas since past experience has shown that some won't. And that's led investors to focus on the short-term supply picture in which U.S. unleaded gasoline and crude inventories are ample.

Light, sweet crude for August delivery fell 57 cents to $14.03 a barrel; July heating oil fell 1.65 cents to 38.80 cents a gallon; and July unleaded gasoline fell 2.03 cents to 45.93 cents a gallon. Natural gas futures rose 2.8 cents amid hot temperatures across the country that were boosting cooling demand. The July contract settled at $2.364 for each 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, North Sea Brent Blend crude oil for delivery in August settled at $13.11 per barrel, down 50 cents, on the International Petroleum Exchange.

NYMEX CRUDE

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Ends Up On Tech Buying, Hot Temperatures

NEW YORK, June 25 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures mostly ended higher Thursday in an active session, with stable physical prices from a searing summer heat wave and late technical buying lifting the complex, industry sources said.

July climbed 2.8 cents to close at $2.364 per million British thermal units after trading today between $2.295 and $2.42. August settled 2.7 cents higher at $2.394. Other deferreds ended flat to up 2.5 cents.

''When July held the ($2.295-2.30) gap, the shorts started covering. With this weather, the market feels like it's trying to set up for higher prices in July and August, but I expect July futures to expire (Friday) in the $2.30s,'' said one Midwest trader.

While the season's first broad heat wave helped trigger the June rally, traders said further upside seemed stalled by ongoing concerns about storage, still 456 bcf, or 31 percent above year-ago.

But with cash still several cents above the screen, few expected July to crater before it goes off the board tomorrow.

Eastern temperatures through Monday are expected to average four to 12 degrees F above normal, with cooler levels forecast for early next week. Similar levels are predicted for the Midwest. Readings in Texas are expected to stay hot this week, averaging as much as 10 degrees F above normal. Florida will average two to six degrees above normal for the period. In the Southwest, the mercury will drift on either side of normal.

Forecasts early next week call for more seasonal weather in the upper Midwest, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. Florida also may drop closer to seasonal levels from the near-record highs seen this week. Texas is expected to remain above normal,

Chart traders noted the July gap at $2.295-2.30 was filled today. Most agreed July needed to hold above that level to keep the recent uptrend intact. A July close below $2.295 could lead to a test of next support in the the low-$2.20s, with further buying expected at $2.09 and then in the $2.00 area. Resistance was seen first at the recent $2.425 high, with next resistance at $2.585 and then at the $2.65 double top from April.

But with July set to expire Friday, traders turned their attention to August, where a gap from Monday at $2.32 also was filled. A close below that level could send prices to the $2.20 area, the 50 percent retracement of the recent rally to $2.464. Resistance was seen at the recent $2.464 high.

In the cash Thursday, Gulf Coast quotes were flat to down slightly in the mid-$2.30s. Midwest pipes were steady to one cent lower in the high-$2.20s. Chicago city gate gas was talked in the $2.41-2.49 range, little changed from the mid-$2.40s seen yesterday. Hot temperatures and high humidity firmed New York prices slightly to the mid-$2.60s. In the West, El Paso Permian mostly was pegged in the low- to mid-$2.20s, unchanged to a penny lower on the day.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip gained 1.2 cents to $2.499.

NYMEX total estimated Hub volumes were not available at 1630 EDT but 89,732 Hub contracts had traded as of 1500 EDT versus Wednesday's revised tally of 89,074.

NORTH AMERICAN SPOT NATURAL GAS

US Spot Gas Prices Little Changed, Buoyed By Heat

NEW YORK, June 25 - U.S. spot natural gas prices were flat to down only slightly Thursday, still underpinned by the near-record heat blanketing much of the nation and forecasts for more heat later next week, sources said.

While forecasts early next week call for more moderate temperatures for the upper Midwest and East, traders said 11-15 day predictions expect the hot weather to return.

''We're supposed to cool down a little, but late next week it gets hot again, and if this weather continues, I don't see July and August (cash) getting real weak,'' said one East Coast trader.

But he said longer-term, high storage was still a concern.

Overall inventories are still 456 bcf, or 31 percent above year-ago. To get stocks to 2.8 trillion cubic feet by October 31, weekly injections need to average just 45 bcf.

Swing gas at Henry Hub traded today between $2.34 and $2.42 per mmBtu, with most deals reported in the $2.38-2.40 range, down about a penny on the day but still more than 35 cents over the June index.

Steady heat in Texas kept prices there in the low-to-mid $2.30s, more than 35 cents over index. Electric demand in the state is still fairly high but not at record levels.

In the Midwest, pipes like Panhandle were flat to down slightly in the high-$2.20s, still more than 30 cents over June indices. Gas at the Chicago city gate was unchanged in the mid-$2.40s.

In West Texas, Permian Basin quotes were off a penny in the low-to-mid $2.20s, while San Juan was talked in the $1.70s and $1.80s, down 10-20 cents due to slack West Coast demand and a one-day maintenance project on the Oasis pipeline that was restricting about 400 mmcfd.

Prices at the Southern California border also were steady to down slightly in the low-to-mid $2.20s, with mild California weather still slowing demand.

In the Northeast, warm temperatures and high humidity firmed New York city gate quotes a couple of cents to the mid-$2.60s.

Eastern temperatures through Monday are expected to average six to 12 degrees F above normal, with cooler levels forecast for early next week. Similar levels are predicted for the Midwest. Readings in Texas are expected to stay hot this week, averaging as much as 10 degrees F above normal. Florida will average two to six degrees above normal for the period. In the Southwest, the mercury will swing on either side of normal.

Forecasts next week call for more seasonal weather in the upper Midwest, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. Texas is expected to remain above normal, but Florida may drop closer to seasonal levels from the near-record highs seen this week.

Most Canada Spot Gas Prices Flat To Down Slightly

NEW YORK, June 25 - Canadian spot natural gas prices mostly were unchanged to down slightly Thursday in quiet trade, lightly pressured by reports Alberta field receipts were on the rise as plant maintenance work wound down, sources said.

''There are still some outages, but field receipts are coming back, so prices could drop a bit further,'' said one cash trader.

Total field receipts in Alberta stood at 12.1 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd), up from 11.6 the previous day but still down from the normal level of about 12.4 bcfd. Linepack yesterday was at 12.5 bcfd, down from NOVA's target of 12.8 bcfd.

Continued outages resulted in storage injections yesterday of 95 million cubic feet (mmcf), down from 575 mmcf the previous day.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted down a penny today in the C$2.02-2.07 per gigajoule range, still more than 30 cents over the June index.

July delivery at AECO was discussed about five cents lower at C$1.88-1.90, while one-year packages at AECO were pegged in the mid-C$2.50s.

Export prices were mixed, with quotes at Huntingdon/Sumas off more than five cents to US$1.51-1.56 per million British thermal units, still 15 cents over index.

Emerson, Manitoba, gas destined for the U.S. Midwest firmed two cents to the low-to-mid US$1.60s.

In the east, gas for export at Niagara gained slightly to the mid-US$2.40s, helped by warmer East Coast temperatures.

Friday Update

Oil Claws Back Slim Gains In OPEC Aftermath

LONDON, June 26 - Oil markets edged up nervously on Friday as traders covered their positions ahead of the weekend while OPEC's agreement to cut future output was still drowned out by concerns over the current oversupply.

International benchmark Brent clawed back 15 cents to stand at $13.26 in early Friday trade, having closed 49 cents lower on Thursday in spite of an OPEC bail-out plan unveiled in Vienna this week.

Traders said Friday's rise was technical short- covering rather than any genuine confidence in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' promised cuts of 2.6 million barrels from world markets beginning July 1.

The oil cartel said it would chop nearly 10 percent off output in an effort to drain brimming oil storage tanks and resurrect prices from their lowest levels in 12 years but traders were sceptical.

"You have to react to the cuts, because the market reacts to them, but do I believe in them? Never have, never will," said one trader on the floor of London's International Petroleum Exchange.

OPEC credibility was further undermined on Friday by reports of comments from the oil minister of OPEC linchpin Saudi Arabia, Ali al-Naimi that he expected producers would cheat on the deal.

"The market doesn't believe the compliance will be one hundred percent and they are probably right. I don't think anybody expects one hundred percent compliance." the minister told the Wall Street Journal.

While many analysts applauded both the size and duration of the promised cuts and forecast a steady rise in oil prices as seasonal demand kicks in toward the end of the year, traders continued to focus on a present-day market awash with oil.

"Tanks are full, there's very little in the way of storage, and I'm just not going to be buying the deal until we see some of that surplus come down," said one floor trader.

Many oil industry analysts were predicting that the world's call on OPEC would outpace the group's supply sometime in the fourth quarter and boost prices, but others were less certain.

"While the latest agreement will help to reduce the supply surplus later in the year, it certainly won't remove it," said Michael Barry of Energy Market Consultants in London.

"We don't go for the consensus view," Barry said, noting that the consultancy had upwardly adjusted its forecast for oil prices by the end of the year to only $14-$15.

Oil prices are floundering well below last year's average of $19.32 a barrel, and petrodollar revenues of many major oil producers have collapsed.

Prices were on an upward trend until last November when OPEC raised output just as Asian demand was fading, oil storage tanks were swelling and the West basked in unusually warm winter weather.

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Called Up With OTC

NEW YORK, June 26 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures were expected to open a couple of cents higher Friday, helped by strong overnight ACCESS trade and firmer early over-the-counter (OTC) quotes, industry sources said.

July over-the-counter quotes ranged this morning from $2.38 to $2.42 per million British thermal units, with the lower numbers talked later. July settled 2.8 cents higher Thursday at $2.364, then on ACCESS, last traded up 7.6 cents at $2.44, above near resistance.

Early cash quotes at the Hub were in the $2.40 area, little changed from Thursday's average.

"The heat is a big concern, and power should be screaming again today, but I still think July is going off the board somewhere in the $2.30s," said one Midwest trader.

While high storage was still a longer-term worry, traders said the near-term focus remained on the heat.

Eastern temperatures through Tuesday are expected to average six to 12 degrees F above normal, with cooler levels forecast for early next week. Similar levels are predicted for the Midwest. Readings in Texas are expected to stay hot this week, averaging as much as 12 degrees F above normal, but cooling a few degrees early next week. Florida will average three to six degrees above normal for the period. In the Southwest, the mercury will remain at about normal levels.

Chart traders noted the July filled the $2.295-2.30 gap yesterday, then rebounded, leaving the recent uptrend intact. A July close below $2.295 could lead to a test of next support in the the low-$2.20s, with further buying expected at $2.09 and then in the $2.00 area. Resistance was now seen at the ACCESS high of $2.444, then at $2.585 and at the $2.65 double top from April.

But with July set to expire today, traders turned their attention to August, where a gap from Monday at $2.32 also was filled. A close below that level could send prices to the $2.20 area, the 50 percent retracement of the recent rally to $2.464. Resistance was seen at recent highs in the $2.464-2.465 area.






To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11477)6/26/1998 4:04:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURS. JUNE 25, 1998 (5)

TOP STORIES

OPEC Fights Weak Market With More Production Cuts

OPEC ministers said Wednesday night they will slash daily production by almost 1.4 million barrels to boost prices as they fight the weakest oil market since the disaster year of 1986.

But oil traders were not immediately impressed, and OPEC said it might take months before a global supply glut is erased and prices can bounce back by a few dollars per barrel.

OPEC will withdraw 1.38 million barrels of oil from the market every day beginning July 1, ministers said, adding to earlier cuts that failed to reverse the damage OPEC itself created by pumping too much oil.

The OPEC president, United Arab Emirates oil minister Obaid bin Saif al-Nasseri, vowed that the new cuts will "banish the volatility so plaguing the market."

OPEC confronted a pricing crisis that pushed its average crude price below $11 US a barrel last week - less than half the group's target price of $21 US a barrel. But it could be a while before prices recover.

"It's a slow-burn fuse," said Leo Drollas, chief economist at the London-based Centre for Global Energy Studies. "Then it's going to go higher if they deliver - $16 or more."

The cheap prices have been a bargain for consumers, including gas guzzling North Americans, but a disaster for the oil producers, who will have problems meeting their national budget targets if the latest effort to rescue oil prices fails.

The Kuwaiti minister, Sheik Saud Nasser al-Sabah, said he would even consider further production cuts if prices don't respond - an idea echoed by his Algerian counterpart, Youcef Yousfi.

Others in OPEC hope the latest measures, which are aided by 203,000 barrels in daily production cuts from non-OPEC members Mexico, Russia, Oman and Egypt, finally can end their financial nightmare.

OPEC made an ill-judged decision in November to raise its output, just as the economic crisis in Asia was starting to choke off the growth in global oil demand.

OPEC ministers met informally Wednesday, and thought they had a deal, until last-minute questions about Iran's likely compliance forced some quick haggling that delayed the formal start of the group's summer meeting until late in the night.

Iranian oil minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh assured his OPEC counterparts that his production cuts - 190,000 barrels - will be real.

OPEC did not immediately confirm the size of all cuts to be made. But OPEC delegates said privately the reductions would be led by the Saudis, who are chopping 425,000 barrels a day from their production beginning on July 1. Venezuela has promised to cut 325,000 barrels a day.

Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Nigeria each pledged to cut production by 100,000 barrels daily, with smaller cuts coming in from smaller OPEC members, delegates said on condition of anonymity.

Even Indonesia, which has faced the double whammy of an economic collapse at home and lower oil prices, said it would remove 30,000 barrels from the market.

Oil market analysts have been looking for new output reductions of at least 1 million barrels a day from OPEC.

"This is a powerful agreement," said Michael Rothman, senior energy analyst at Merrill Lynch in New York. Rothman said traders may have initially pushed prices lower on news of the deal because it was a bit confusing, but he predicted oil prices can rise by several dollars if the producers stick with their promises.

Oil futures prices ended mixed. Light sweet crude oil to be delivered in August rose eight cents to $14.60 US a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil for August fell 31 cents to $13.61 US on London's International Petroleum Exchange.

Other analysts have cautioned that OPEC needs to show that it can deliver.

Despite the gravity of OPEC's recent problems, traders can't ignore the fact that the producers in recent years have persistently lacked the willpower to stick to their production agreements.

The oil ministers held an emergency meeting in March, agreeing to cut 1.245 million barrels of daily production. They didn't deliver all, of those cuts and prices plunged further, leading to the latest effort to restrain production further.

Members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries are Algeria, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

OPEC Cuts Will 'Banish Volatility'
Cartel Vows To Cut Output By 1.38M Barrels A Day

Calgary Herald

Talk from OPEC's oil ministers was cheap Wednesday -- apparently worth only a few pennies a barrel.

A pledge to cut production by 1.38 million barrels a day at OPEC's meeting in Vienna didn't do much to impress oil traders immediately, as crude gained only eight cents on the New York Mercantile Exchange to $14.60 US a barrel.

Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries announced their second production cut this year to boost prices in the weakest market since the disaster year of 1986.

But OPEC members have a history of breaking promises.

"It's more than I thought they would cut but talk's cheap," said Martin Molyneaux, an analyst at FirstEnergy Capital Corp. in Calgary. "If oil prices react too much or too quickly, then people are going to start to cheat."

OPEC will withdraw the crude from the market beginning July 1, the ministers said, adding to earlier cuts that failed to reverse the damage OPEC itself created by pumping too much oil.

The cartel said it may take months before a global oil supply glut is erased and prices bounce back by a few dollars per barrel.

OPEC's president, United Arab Emirates oil minister Obaid bin Saif al-Nasseri, said the new cuts will "banish the volatility so plaguing the market."

Crude has climbed $2.76 US a barrel this week amid speculation about the cuts. The price hit a 12-year low of $11.77 last Thursday.

"It's easy to announce cuts," said Bob Hinckley, a New York-based analyst with Merrill Lynch. "It's a lot harder to go out and actually turn the valves down and abide by that promise and that's what has created the credibilit problem."

The Kuwaiti oil minister, Sheik Saud Nasser al-Sabah, said he would even consider further production cuts if prices don't respond, an idea echoed by his Algerian counterpart, Youcef Yousfi.

Others in OPEC hope the latest measures, which are aided by 203,000 barrels in daily production cuts from non-OPEC members Mexico, Russia, Oman and Egypt, finally can end their financial nightmare.

The group made an ill-judged decision last November to raise its output by 10 per cent, just as the economic crisis in Asia was starting to choke off growth in global oil demand. OPEC supplies about one-third of the 75 million barrels of oil the world consumes daily.

OPEC has now pledged to cut a total of 3.1 million barrels of oil a day this year, more than making up for the 2.5 million barrels of production added last fall.

The reductions would be led by Saudi Arabia, which is chopping 425,000 barrels a day from production.

Waiting Game
Cautious Optimisim Greets Additional OPEC Cuts

Calgary Sun

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) wrapped up its annual investment symposium Wednesday on an optimistically cautious note.

After the National Petroleum Show, which earlier this month brought some 42,000 delegates to Calgary, some 100 Canadian oil and gas companies -- mainly from Alberta -- presented their assessments and predictions to more than 300 oil and gas analysts from around the world.

The timing couldn't have been better.

On Monday, the spot price for West Texas Intermediate crude rose $ 1.55 U.S. a barrel to to $13.38, and on Tuesday it wa another $1.05 U.S. to close at $14.43.

Wednesday, it rose by 15 cents.

That three-day rally ended a 12-year low drop in oil prices.

Then, yesterday, the Organizaton of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agreed cut output by and additional 797,000 barrels a day, bringing total cuts pledged by world producers this month to 1.537 million barrels a day.

With non-OPEC countries participating in the cuts, that means 3.3 million barrels a day -- or 4.4% of world consumption -- have been taken off the markets. David Manning, president of CAPP, cautioned the situation is still unstable and unpredictable.

But Manning pointed out the theme of the conference has been that long term projects by the Canadian industry -- including Athabasca oilsands, East Coast endeavors like Hibernia and foreign exploration and development plays -- are still going ahead.

He also stressed natural gas prices are high; U.S. demand rising ; the Canadian dollar is at an all-time low; and that a number of pipeline projects are about to go ahead, or await expected regulatory approval.

Analysts concurred, warning producers will have to wait weeks -- if not months -- before they know how the cuts will impact the industry.

"Like anything OPEC does, the real question is not whether they've promised to cut production, but whether they'll actually do it," said Martin Molyneaux of FirstEnergy Capital Corp.

OPEC Promises Find Cool Reception In Oilpatch
The Financial Post

If the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries delivers its promised production cuts, Canada's oil industry could start bouncing back within three months, analysts said yesterday.

"The question is, can they [OPEC] live by their word? In the past, they have not been able to cut the whole amount," said New York-based Robert Hinckley, vice-president of global securities research at Merrill Lynch & Co.

"The market initially is going to pop and then it's going to settle back and take a wait and see attitude."

The cartel's oil ministers agreed yesterday in Vienna to reduce their combined daily production by 1.36 million barrels - or 2.5 million b/d when combined with cuts announced in March.

"It's easy to announce the cuts," Hinckley said. "It's a lot harder to actually go out and close the valve. That's what created the credibility problem today and that's why the market will settle back below US$15 for a while, to see if those cuts actually occur."

One major producer, Gulf Canada Resources Ltd., will wait a week or two to gauge market reaction before taking any steps, said president and chief executive Dick Auchinleck.

"If prices continue to increase through that period of time, then we are looking good for the remainder of the year. If they stay down though, then for the remainder of the year we are in a low price environment."

An oil price increase may slow merger and acquisition activity in the industry, now running at high levels and expected go into top gear this summer. Producers battered by low oil prices will gain more confidence in their ability to survive, said Martin Molyneaux, director of research at FirstEnergy Capital Corp. in Calgary.

The news gave the industry pause to cheer, but champagne corks weren't popping in downtown Calgary boardrooms.

Producers will have to wait weeks - if not months - before getting a clear idea of how the cuts will impact them, industry observers said as news of the deal trickled out of Vienna.

"Like anything OPEC does, the real question is not whether they've promised to cut production, but whether they'll actually do it," said Molyneaux. "Once again, they're in a position to either keep their promises or keep on producing at the same rate. I think everyone is just waiting to see what actually happens."

Higher prices could also precipitate a period of heightened activity by the end of the year, when the industry will also have to step up production of natural gas to fill new pipelines to the U.S.

The Best And Worst Of Times
Globe & Mail

What a difference a year makes. Last year, the annual investment forum put on by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) arrived smack in the middle of an acquisition frenzy in the oil patch, and everyone was smiling. This year, there are some pretty long faces -- and unlike last year, some of those who look the saddest are the takeover candidates.

Last summer, those in the takeover cross-hairs -- such as Dee Parkinson and Dennis Sharp of CS Resources, or Jeff Tonken of Stampeder Explorations -- looked pretty happy with the prices their companies were fetching. This year, buyout candidates know that for many of them, the only reason they are being seen as attractive prey at all is that they are cheap.

That doesn't include natural gas companies, however, thanks to bullish prices for the commodity. You could walk through the CAPP conference and spot the CEOs of gas companies and the CEOs of oil companies -- especially heavy oil -- from a mile away. The oil guys seemed on edge, like they hadn't slept, while the gas executives had a certain swagger about them.

Canadian 88 chief executive officer Greg Noval, for example -- never one to shy away from a cutting jab at a competitor, or a self-aggrandizing remark -- seemed to want to take home the title in the swaggering department. Mr. Noval's company is focused entirely on gas and has some of the lowest costs in the entire industry, something he made sure to mention several times.

Mr. Noval said the name of the game is "kickin' ass in oil and gas" and that his company wasn't scaling back at all like some others. "It's balls to the wall, excuse my French for any of the ladies in the audience," he said. As for any companies who have gotten over their heads in debt, and are watching their cash flow dry up, "we'll take advantage of that."

Some of those under the most pressure at the CAPP conference were companies with too much heavy oil in their portfolio -- unlike last year, when everyone wanted to get some. While the three-day CAPP song-and-dance show was under way last summer, for example, PanCanadian Petroleum announced that it had bought heavy oil producer CS Resources for $465-million.

Having failed in his bid for the company, Gulf Canada's then-CEO J.P. Bryan gobbled up Stampeder Explorations for $688-million in July, and in September Ranger Oil bought heavy oil producer Elan Energy for $565-million. Smaller companies got into the act too -- Baytex Energy, a fast-growing intermediate producer, paid $267-million for Dorset Exploration.

Not long after Ranger and Baytex bought, however, the price of oil started to head south at breakneck speed -- and didn't stop until it got to about $16 (U.S.) a barrel. Then it continued its descent, and appeared to hit bottom last week at about $11.50, before climbing on news of OPEC production cutbacks. Heavy oil is even lower, since it trades at a discount to regular crude.

Not surprisingly, Baytex Energy CEO Dale Shwed was one of those looking rather pinched during this week's CAPP conference. Giants like PanCanadian and Ranger can reduce the impact of their heavy oil excesses by focusing on other parts of their business. Baytex, by contrast, has found its Dorset purchase acting like a big brake on its previous track record of growth.

Although Dorset boosted Baytex's revenue to $124-million (Canadian) last year, its cash flow rose only moderately and its share profit fell -- largely because the company issued about 15 million shares in the takeover. Combine that with difficulty in producing the synergies the market was hoping for and Dorset's leverage toward heavy oil, and it's not a pretty picture.

The stock is currently trading for about $7 a share -- down 30 per cent from the $10 it was at just a few weeks ago, before the company's first-quarter results were released, and down more than 57 per cent from $17.50 in May. In the first quarter, the company reported that profit fell 56 per cent from the same quarter the previous year.

A tight-lipped Mr. Shwed admitted to the institutional investors and other industry players attending the CAPP conference that "the credibility of management has been called into question" by Baytex's plunging stock price and lacklustre performance. However, he did the best he could to argue that his company's assets are currently undervalued.

For example, he said, using the kinds of values for land and reserves that were implied by the recent takeover of Tarragon Oil & Gas, Baytex "has a net asset value of about $14.70 per share." He also made a point of mentioning that just 17 per cent of the company's production is heavy oil. "We're not a heavy oil company, as we have been accused of being," he said.

There were lots of investment types and other oil and gas executives taking notes, and studying their corporate handouts -- like bargain shoppers reading the K mart flyers in their newspaper.

Crestar Energy CEO Sees Net Loss In 1998

Crestar Energy Inc. is projecting a net loss and sharply lower cash flow this year as depressed crude prices weigh heavily on its financial outlook, Crestar Chief Executive Barry Jackson said on Wednesday.

Crestar expects a 1998 net loss of C$45 million or C$0.75 a share, down from a profit of C$32 million or C$0.64 a share in 1997, Jackson said at the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers investment symposium.

Cash flow was projected to be C$235 million or C$4.10 a share, down from C$291 million or C$5.76 a share last year.

''It's hard to paint a very bright picture for 1998 given commodity prices and where they are,'' Jackson told reporters after his presentation.

''However, many of us have been around long enough in this business to have seen several of these down cycles, and the other side of the down cycle is the up cycle. You've just got to persevere.''

Jackson's forecast assumed an average West Texas Intermediate crude oil price of US$16 a barrel this year, a Crestar natural gas price of C$2 per thousand cubic feet and a Canadian dollar exchange rate of US$0.69.

The company expects its Alberta and Saskatchewan oil and gas properties to pump out an average of 93,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day in 1998, up 17 percent from 79,500 last year.

Crestar's stock price, which reached a peak of C$32 in November 1996, has been under pressure since then. It has recently touched lows of below C$17, amid investor concern over its exposure to oil prices, especially discounted Canadian heavy oil.

The company has recently been speculated as one of several takeover targets in the Canadian energy sector.

Jackson attributed some of the negative sentiment to Crestar's high debt levels, but said investors were more concerned with that than the banks.

The company expects its long-term debt to be C$640 million-C$710 million by the end of this year, which would result in debt being 2.7-3.0 times its projected cash flow.

''In a different interest rate environment that might be a different story, but the banks are not excited at all,'' he said.

Jackson said he placed little credence on the takeover rumors involving his company, although he acknowledged a growing trend toward studying merger possibilities as the industry has fallen on tough times.

Anderson Exploration Cuts Output Forecast

Anderson Exploration Ltd. has cut its projection for 1998 production by 2.6 percent because it had shut in several heavy oil wells and deferred some drilling due to low prices, Chief Executive J.C. Anderson said on Wednesday.

Anderson said the company now expected to produce 94,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day in western Canada this year, down from an earlier forecast of 96,500.

Also, a previous projection of drilling 570 wells has been reduced to 500, he said at the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers investment symposium.

''It's not a huge cut, we're talking about 2.6 percent in the forecast, and the reason is we've shut in 1,500 barrels a day of heavy oil because we're not making any money on it,'' Anderson told reporters after his presentation.

Of the total expected output, the company now expected to produce 570 million cubic feet of natural gas a day, down from the earlier forecast of 585 million. Crude oil production, meanwhile, was expected to average 37,000 barrels a day, down from the previously predicted 38,000.

Anderson said an interruption in the company's production this spring, caused by a rash of forest fires that cut a swath through its Alberta operating areas, would not have a major impact on average output for the full year.

Anderson Exploration was forced to shut down as much as 8,000 barrels a day of oil production during the peak of the fire threat, but that would only translate into a reduction of about 200 barrels a day when spread out over the full year, he said.

Anderson repeated that he had not had any discussions with potential acquistors for his company, despite numerous recent rumors that it was a takeover target, possibly for a U.S.-based oil company.

Gulf Indonesia and Talisman Energy Continue Successful Gas Drilling in South Sumatra

Gulf Indonesia Resources Limited and Talisman (Corridor) Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Talisman Energy Inc. (NYSE/TLM), announced a new natural gas discovery in the Corridor Production Sharing Contract (PSC) area located in South Sumatra, Indonesia. The Rebonjaro Dalam-1 exploration well tested four zones at depths between 1,801 and 2,124 metres (5,910 and 6,970 feet) and flowed at an initial rate of 6.2 million cubic feet of gas per day through a 3/4 inch choke during an eight hour period. The composition of the gas includes 26 per cent carbon dioxide. Gulf has initiated plans for additional wells on the structure to delineate the size of the field.

Rebonjaro Dalam-1 represents the eighth gas discovery made by the companies in the area since 1991. The proximity of the discovery to the Corridor Gas Project infrastructure will enable easy tie-in for future gas production from the area. The discovery lies 5 kilometres (3 miles) from the main gathering line that will transport gas to the processing plant. The first phase of the Corridor Gas Project is near completion and is expected to commence natural gas sales to Caltex's Duri steamflood project in central Sumatra within 90 days.

Gulf Indonesia Resources Limited maintains a 54 per cent interest in the Corridor Block PSC and acts as operator. Partners are Talisman (Corridor) Ltd. with 36 per cent and Pertamina of Indonesia with 10 per cent.

Gulf Canada Has Netherlands Natural Gas Discovery

Gulf Canada Resources Limited announced today a natural gas discovery at the Gulf operated Q4-8 exploration well on the Q-4 Block located offshore in the Dutch sector of the North Sea. Gulf Canada Resources, through its wholly owned subsidiary Clyde Petroleum Exploratie B.V., currently holds a 49.75 per cent interest in the block.

The Q4 discovery well tested 27 million cubic feet of gas per day and is located approximately 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Gulf operated infrastructure in the area, which will potentially reduce development time. The current plan is to submit a production licence application later this year, proposing to start production by year-end 1999.

Partners in the Q-4 Block are Dyas B.V. with a 17.25 per cent interest and Clam Petroleum B.V. (a 50/50 joint venture with Marathon Petroleum Netherlands, Ltd., which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Marathon Oil Company, and Burlington Resources Netherlands Inc., which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Burlington Resources Inc (NYSE:BR) with a 33 per cent interest. The State has a right to acquire a 40 per cent interest through Energie Beheer Nederland B.V. under ''back-in'' provisions.

Precision Drilling Has Record Quarter, Year
The Financial Post

Acquisitions and high demand pushed Precision Drilling Corp. to record earnings and revenue in the fourth quarter and fiscal year ended April 30.

The Calgary-based energy service company said yesterday revenue for the final quarter climbed to $238.4 million from $148.5 million, and profit more than doubled to $27.3 million (65› a share) from $13.5 million (42›) a year earlier.

For the full year, Canada's largest contract driller had profit of $117.5 million ($2.82) on revenue of $1.01 billion, up from profit of $42.4 million ($1.44) on revenue of $455 million the year before.

Drilling services accounted for 68% of Precision's revenue in the year and 79% of operating earnings. The percentage of earnings coming from specialty services will grow because of recent purchases of Inter-Tech Drilling Solutions Ltd. and Northland Energy Corp., said Dale Tremblay, senior vice-president of finance and chief financial officer.

The firm is still looking for acquisitions that build on its core strengths.

Precision expects to benefit from producers' focus on gas plays this year because of low oil prices. The company has many big rigs suited for deep gas wells, said Miles Lich, a service firm analyst with Peters & Co. Ltd. in Calgary.

However, he estimates profit will fall to $114 million ($2.67 a fully diluted share)for the year.

"Rig utilization is going to be off. Day rates for rigs are coming off and have been for a month or so. That pressure will continue until commodity prices improve," he said.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11477)6/26/1998 4:15:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURS. JUNE 25, 1998 (6)

TOP STORIES, Con't

TSE Pulls Camberly Energy Listing
The Financial Post

Shares of Camberly Energy Ltd., a troubled oil and gas junior, have been suspended from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

The exchange said yesterday this was because the company has not met its continued listing requirements

Spokesman Steve Kee said the exchange considers Camberly to no longer have an active business.

"The TSE doesn't list inactive companies," he said.

Calgary-based Camberly has been beset by failed exploration projects, bad loans and several resignations from its board of directors.

Chief executive Michael Duggan could not be reached for comment.

Last year, Camberly sold its Alberta oil and gas wells for $27 million. At yearend, it wrote off its entire investment in an exploration project in China.

The company was recently cited by the British Columbia Securities Commission for failure to file yearend and first quarter financial statements.

Shares of Camberly (CEL/TSE) last traded on Wednesday, when they closed at 40›.

Offbeat News From NOIA '98
St. John's Evening Telegram

The 14th NOIA conference in St. John's lacked a knock-out punch of the type delivered by the inimitable John Crosbie at this event in 1996, but as one speaker put it Wednesday "we're talking about what we're doing, not what we're planning to do."

Here's a brief look at what else transpired at NOIA `98.

 PanCanadian's Larry Leblanc announced the company plans to drill a well at Shoal Point on the west coast as soon as they secure a partner, but warned the region lacked an infrastructure.

"We have to mobilize and demobilize drilling equipment every time we put a well up there and we don't believe this is good business," he said.

 Whiterose will be drilled twice by this time next year and the smaller Cape Race property could be drilled "as early as late in 1999," Husky vice-president Jamie Blair said.

"We have initiated preliminary engineering feasibility studies in search of development facilities which would allow for exploitation of fields of (the Cape race) order of magnitiute of 50-100 million barrel reserve potential," he said.

 Norsk Hydro Canada president Ivar Ramberg told the audience the company's horizontal drilling technology allowed it to drill a hole nearly three kilometres in a straight line. He won the unofficial "best slide of the conference award," with an image of two geologists wearing 3-D goggles and walking around inside a virtual reservoir, discussing drilling plans as they felt their way around the oil field at a new facility in Bergen.

 Petro-Canada's Gary Bruce couldn't dodge the engineers in Leatherhead issue but won some reprieve thanks to a Halliburton Company announcement that its Shawmont/Brown and Root team of Terra Nova engineers will grow to 100 and will bid on international contracts when Terra Nova work winds down.

"They're going to have a sustainable job here, and that's what the Terra Nova alliance has been trying to do. We're not interested in you're-here-for-three-months-and-you're-gone-again, there's no value in that," Bruce said.

 Minister of Energy Chuck Furey appeared resigned to the fact the 250 Terra Nova engineering jobs would remain in Leatherhead for the summer, despite a CNOPB requirement that Petro-Canada move the jobs here "as soon as practicable."

"The wording in the recommendation (sic) by CNOPB was vague and weak," Furey said in an interview Wednesday. "We will have to look at that. I discussed it with board this morning."

 The prospect of tapping all that natural gas from Hibernia and other Grand Banks fields was brought up twice. Mobil's Miller said liquid natural gas conversion appeared a good option and suggested they could begin looking at planning a Hibernia gas strategy in four to five years.

Husky's Jamie Blair appeared to lean more toward a pipeline.

"We also envision gas opportunities in the medium to long term," Blair said. "Natural gas exploitation will require substantial pipeline and related infrastructure development. We believe it is timely to put significant effort to project planning now."

 Finally, questions from the floor were few and far between at NOIA `98 but organizers stuck to their guns and maintained the so-called Gavin Will rule, which was spelled out in a press release that stated the question period was reserved for delegates only. Offshore Oil Canada reporter Gavin Will was spotted raising his hand after Dick Lyon's address, but organizers politely declined.

Atlantic Riches

Mobil Oil Set To Beef Up Exploration


There could be as much as 43 billion barrels of oil and gas lying offshore and underground in Atlantic Canada, Mobil Oil Canada said yesterday.

And the Calgary-based company plans to spend more than $600 million in the region this year to develop existing fields and continue exploration, said Ken Miller, Mobil's Eastern Canada vice-president.

"Our assumption today is that there is potentially about 43 billion barrels in the future, about half of which is economicallydevelopable in the medium-term future," said Miller.

The latest assessment, which includes the Hibernia, Sable Island and Terra Nova fields, improves upon the company's previous survey. That pegged the reserve potential at less than 40 billion barrels.

Mobil is proving its faith in its figures with the establishment of two new offices in Halifax and St. John's

While the company has holdings off the west coast of Newfoundland and in an area known as the Laurentian sub-basin, it plans to keep its focus on the Grand Banks east of Newfoundland, said Miller.

Mobil, along with partner Chevron Canada Resources, is working to establish a plan to pursue 13 new parcels of offshore territory that will become available this fall.

And Mobil has contracted a drilling rig to begin exploration work on the Grand Banks this fall that could continue for at least a year, said Miller.

Mobil, the lead partner in the Hibernia project, hinted Wednesday there could be further increases in Hibernia's recoverable oil estimates beyond the 135-million barrel increase the company announced last year.

The six-member Hibernia consortium has held steadfast to its original conservative estimates of 615 million barrels in its two main reservoirs.

But Mobil increased its estimate to 750 million barrels.

"It's very possible the reserves could go higher than that," said Miller.

Some industry observers have said the total could reach one billion barrels, depending on technological advances.

Miller said the company will be watching how the installation of new water and gas injectors improves the oil flow before reassessing its estimate.

Mobil Moving Offices East
The Evening Telegram

Mobil is planning to open new offices in St. John's and Halifax in the next couple of months, Mobil Oil Canada vice-president Ken Miller said at the NOIA conference Wednesday.

Each office will likely have a staff of eight to 10, Miller said in an upbeat address.

Miller told the 500 delegates at the 14th annual conference the Hibernia story has a happy ending.

"I am pleased and excited to say it's a very happy ending for Mobil, (the) industry and Newfoundland in particular," Miller said.

By 2005, Mobil's share of production on the East Coast will exceed 250,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day, or six per cent of Canada's current production, Miller said.

The estimate for total East Coast production is the equivalent of more than 800,000 million barrels a day, he said.

"And, there is potential to go beyond that."

Miller also spoke of the potential gas development and welcomed a study being conducted by Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association..

Stephen Henley, NOIA president, told delegates earlier, a natural gas utilization study is well under way, with the first phase on target for completion in early July.

He said it will provide a document describing the volume, composition, location and geophysical characteristics of the natural gas reserves offshore Newfoundland and Labrador; current and possible future options for producing and transporting the resource; and detailed terms of reference for recommended research and analysis in the study's second phase.

"We're interested in participating in the comprehensive follow-up study," Miller said.

He said it is important to consider all options for delivery of the gas.

"Pipelines lines may not necessarily be the most economic way and other alternatives should be explored." He noted, for example, Mobil is currently studying the idea of transformation of gas to liquid natural gas.

Miller described Canada's East Coast activity as "one of Mobil's seven crown jewels."

"It's getting the largest single share of capital investment of our upstream activity worldwide."

Mobil could possibly spend some $2 billion to $3 billion over the next few years in all its activity, including exploration, development and production and the total could be some $6 billion to $8 billion by the
industry as a whole, Miller said.

The forecast for the entire oil sector over the next 10 years is $30 billion, he said.

However, that level of investment can only be made if there is going to be a satisfactory return, he said. There is a need for co-operation among all players to use existing infrastructure to ensure lowest possible costs; a regulatory regime which operates in a timely fashion; and stable business environment.

Hibernia Crude Better Oil
The Evening Telegram

Tests have confirmed that Hibernia crude oil is of a better quality than had originally been expected, says Harvey Smith, president of Hibernia Management and Development Co. (HMDC).

Smith provided a review and update of the Hibernia project Tuesday at the opening session of the 124th annual International Petroleum Conference in St. John's. The two-day conference is being presented by the Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association.

Smith told the 450 delegates the Hibernia crude is approximately 12.5 per cent lighter than was originally thought. That means the oil will burn cleaner and will brings a better price in the marketplace.

Today, Hibernia is producing approximately 95,000 barrels of oil a day from three wells, he said.

That will be reduced to 60,000 barrels a day when one of the wells is shut in later this week. However, that well is expected to produce significant volumes when a water injector has been completed in its fault block in late August or early September.

"To date, we've produced more than seven million barrels of oil and we've shipped eight cargos of oil to market," Smith said. "A ninth cargo will be loaded later this week."

He added, "These initial cargos go directly to market until the fourth quarter of this year when the transshipment terminal at Whiffen Head is completed and operational."

Harvey Mott, president of Newfoundland Transshipment Ltd., told the delegates that project is moving ahead on schedule and the terminal will be operational by Oct. 1.

Smith also said five wells - four oil producers and one water injector - have been completed at Hibernia and an additional six wells are scheduled for completion by year end. Two of those will be oil producers, one a water injector and one a gas injector.

He said Hibernia is on track to meet its business plan target of 25 million barrels for 1998.

Smith said in order to increase production, HMDC plans to "look for bottlenecks in the production train and remove them, thereby increasing their production rate over the design capacity."

He added, "If we can increase our production levels by only 10 per cent, it will translate into an estimated $80 million increase in annual after tax cash flow."

Smith also talked about increasing the business use of infrastructure facilities.

"As other operators come on stream, they will require the same support services as Hibernia," he said. "The effective utilization of existing infrastructure is especially crucial given the low price crude oil scenario that we are now facing for the next few years."

Meanwhile, Bob Dunsmore, project manager for the Terra Nova project, told delegates about the importance of bringing in the project on time and on budget.

"In fact, it is probably the most important factor that will determine the pace of future developments in the area."

Dunsmore noted the conference theme is Energizing our Future.

"With the help of all participants and stakeholders, Terra Nova is on track to play its part in delivering this bright and exciting future."

Dunsmore outlined the project's schedule of activities over the coming months.

He said fabrication of subsea components will begin in the fourth quarter of this year.

"Terra Nova is currently exploring how to effectively facilitate a transfer of subsea fabrication technology to Newfoundland to support the development of a subsea industry here in the province," he said.

"We are confident that this can be done and expect to be able to make a positive announcement on this in the near future."

The drilling of Terra Nova's wells will begin in June 1999, Dunsmore said.

"The total cost of the project up to first oil is estimated at $2 billion," he said. "This is a competitive development cost in the offshore industry today."



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11477)6/26/1998 4:49:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURS. JUNE 25, 1998 (7)

Atlantic Canadians Told Not To Worry About Prices
The Evening Telegram

Atlantic Canadians should not be as worried as Albertans about the world's distressed oil prices, the president of a financial company specializing in the energy industry said in St. John's Tuesday.

But major projects on the Grand Banks are still likely to be deferred if oil prices do not rebound back above the $17 level, Kevin Brown, president of ARC Financial Corp. of Calgary, said at the 14th Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association conference.

The next major projects after Hibernia and Terra Nova will likely be the 195-to-600 million barrel Hebron field and the estimated 250-million-barrel Whiterose field. Both are in the early stages of development with more exploration under way.

"I think if expectations start to slip to 16-17 (dollars a barrel) you'd be hard-pressed to sustain a very vigorous industry up here," Brown told about 400 delegates at the conference. "You certainly would see exploration activity beginning to get deferred and certain projects we think could also get deferred."

Brown added, however, ARC financial, which manages a $195-million strategic energy fund and $300-million energy trust, does not think it likely oil prices will remain depressed for much longer.

The company is cautiously forecasting oil prices to average $16 this year, $17.50 in 1999 and $19 in 2000. The price of a barrel of oil jumped about $1.60 Monday on news OPEC countries were considering additional production cuts.

That's probably not enough to save Alberta from an economic downturn in the oilpatch, however.

"Our view is that the oil price slump that we're in right now is going to have a much more immediate impact on Western Canada (than Eastern Canada)," Brown said. "Access to capital is drying up, cash flow is off sharply, debt levels are high and access to equity is becoming much more challenging.

"It's, in our view, going to force some very significant spending reductions over the second half of the year, possibly into 1999 for Western Canada," he said.

It's a much different picture in the East Coast offshore, where oil quality is superior and large, deep-pocket corporations have the balance sheets to stay for the long-term, he said.

The president of Halliburton Company - the world's largest energy services company with 70,000 employees and $10 billion in annual revenues - was even more bullish on the East Coast offshore.

"I would be very surprised if a sustained low oil price in the range that we're at today would derail any of these projects," Lesar said in an interview after his official conference address. "It's going to derail a lot of other projects around the world but with the reservoir capability here, my guess is that's not going to be the case."

Rough seas and icebergs are not the barriers they once were, he said.

"I think that if you look at where capital is going today, it's going offshore and it's going to deeper water, it's going to harsher environments," Lesar said. "If you look at the expected producibility of these reservoirs, my guess is that they can stand fairly low oil prices for a longer period."

The next few months are expected to be tough for the industry, however, as the world's oil storage facilities fill up and global production remains at about two to three million barrels above consumption.

The positive news for the industry, as Brown sees it, is that over the long term the world's thirst for oil is expected to increase "at something like one to two million barrels per day over the longer term."

If it doesn't, producers and analysts may have to rethink the entire industry.

Ottawa May Solve Boundary Fight
The Evening Telegram

Mines and Energy Minister Chuck Furey is happy the federal government is poised to bring about a resolution to a long-standing offshore boundary dispute between Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.

Federal Natural Resources Minister Ralph Goodale has told the two provinces he will enforce binding arbitration if the issue isn't settled by the end of August.

"I think that's a good thing," Furey told The Evening Telegram late Wednesday. "I'm very happy the federal government feels it is important to have the matter clarified."

The dispute over ownership of the Laurentian Channel between the two provinces has simmered for more than 25 years.

Gulf Canada Resources and Mobil Oil Canada as well as Imperial Oil have an interest in the area but have been unable to proceed beyond exploratory work until the ownership issue is resolved.

The oil companies and Furey all expressed concern about the holdup in exploration and development during the 14th annual International Petroleum Conference in St. John's Tuesday and Wednesday.

Mobil Oil Canada vice president Ken Miller said Mobil would act quickly once the dispute is resolved.

"We need some certainty around the license terms," he said Wednesday. "We see the boundary dispute resolving and once that's done we'd act fairly expeditiously."

The stakes are high for Mobil, which is the second-largest acreage holder in the Laurention Channel area behind Gulf.

"There's a billion barrels of oil and nine trillion cubic feet of gas potential there," Miller said, noting seismic work and drilling still have to be done to prove those numbers.

Goodale discussed the issue in a media briefing later in the day.

The federal minister said he has sent a letter to Furey and Nova Scotia Premier Russell MacLellan, who is also energy minister, urging a settlement of the issue.

"I have asked them to use their best efforts to resolve the matter before the end of August," Goodale said.

"If that can't be done, I will be exercising my responsibility under the Atlantic Accord Implementation Act to bring it to binding arbitration."

Goodale added, "I don't think the federal government and the companies interested in the area can wait forever."

If the provinces inform him sometime prior to the end of August that a resolution is not likely, he would move immediately to arbitration, Goodale said.

Furey has said on numerous occasions that Newfoundland feels Nova Scotia arbitrarily and unfairly drew the boundary line in the dispute area and "that is just not acceptable."

He said Wednesday this province will continue to contact Nova Scotia on the matter but "we have a good solid case prepared and are prepared to move to arbitration."

Furey said the situation may be a difficult one at this time for MacLellan, who is in a slim minority position in Nova Scotia.

"This is not a priority issue for him now so perhaps arbitration is the appropriate way to go."

Goodale said while it is difficult to predict just how long the process might take, judging from past experience, it would likely be eight to 10 months.

Mobil Mulls Site For Upgrader
The Financial Post

Mobil Canada said yesterday it will decide within the next six months on the site of a heavy oil upgrader in Alberta.

The plant will cost $1 billion to $1.5 billion.

Economics, environmental impacts and public input will determine the final choice, a Mobil spokesman said.

U.S. OKs Oil, Natural Gas Royalty Bill

Legislation to change the way companies pay royalties on the oil and natural gas they find on federal land and in offshore waters cleared a subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives.

And though the issue may sound like a sleeper to some, it's not small change for oil and gas companies. Last year, companies paid a record $6 billion in royalties to the federal government.

The bill would no longer require most companies to pay fees based on a percentage of the value of their energy discoveries, but instead allow them to turn over to the federal government a portion of the oil or natural gas drilled.

The "royalty-in-kind" payments would allow the government to then sell the oil or gas, and avoid fighting with companies over the actual value of their energy discoveries, according to the bill's sponsors.

The legislation allows the Interior Department to require cash royalty payment for low-producing oil and natural gas wells in remote locations if those sites are not connected to pipelines and it would be too difficult to transport the energy resources.

In addition, oil and natural gas wells under leases in Alaska would be exempt from the bill, so cash payments would continue for those sites unless the department decided to require in-kind payments.

The White House has threatened to veto the legislation.

And the Interior Department opposes the bill -- arguing the policy change would cost the U.S. Treasury up to $367 million a year.

The bill's chief sponsor, Rep. Mac Thornberry, a Texas Republican, said his bill would allow the federal government to hire an experienced private marketing firm to sell the oil and gas received as in-kind payments.

Because the marketing agent would be able to pool the oil or gas that is produced from multiple federal leases, the agent would be able to obtain a higher price, according to Thornberry. At the same, money would be saved because fewer staff members would be needed to run an in-kind royalty program, he said.

Similar legislation is pending in the Senate, but it has yet to be approved by any panel in that chamber.

Time is running out for either bill to clear the Congress, as there are around only 30 working days left before lawmakers adjourn in early October. Congress will be in recess for several weeks in July and will be off for most f August.

The next step for the House bill is for the Congressional Budget Office to analyze how much the bill will cost. The chairman of the House Resources subcommittee that cleared the bill, Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyo., warned the legislation would not move forward if the CBO determines the measure will cost taxpayers money.

INVESTMENT COMMUNITY

TSE Opens Playground
Toronto Star

The Toronto Stock Exchange has closed its old trading floor but kept the memories alive with a $5 million high-tech playground.

Billed as the world's first interactive stock market learning centre, Stock Market Place is the new public face of Canada's oldest stock exchange, TSE president Rowland Fleming said Wednesday.

"When it became apparent that closure of the trading floor was going to happen, we began to ask ourselves, how would we present ourselves to the public," he explained. The answer was an electronic playground designed to appeal to everyone from Grade 9 students to the most sophisticated investor.

There's a hands-on computer game where you learn that the best way to invest your money isn't publicly traded Canadian stocks but in hockey cards. There's a wall of television monitors transmitting the latest market information from around the world and a desk where you can look at the same computer screen that professional traders watch.

"It's time to bring the world of the stock market from Bay Street to Main Street and to help Canadians discover that learning about investing can be both rewarding and fun," Fleming said. Just over one in three Canadian adults has an investment in the stock market, Fleming noted. That's 7.6 million people. "But our research tells us that there are still too many barriers to information on the
markets."

Located in the heart of the financial district, the 700-square-metre exhibit is in an old National Bank branch on King Street.

The capital cost of the centre was covered by the three founding sponsor Bell Canada, IBM Canada and Bridge Information Systems, which also supplied much of the information technology required to make it work.

The operating costs will be partly covered by an admission fee of $5 for adults and $3 for children and seniors, souvenir sales at the gift shop, and special event rentals.

The facility includes a 145-seat high-tech theatre that can be used for press conferences, annual meetings or other corporate events.

School tours will be free.

The old visitors' gallery overlooking the trading floor used to attract up to 60,000 visitors a year. Fleming predicts the new facility will do even better. "I think the one thing we've underestimated is the positive response we'll get," he said.

The TSE trading floor closed last year when computer assisted trading took over the job of providing a public forum for the exchange of shares.

American Stock Exchange And NASD Merger Creates New Playing Field

American Stock Exchange members approved a merger with the parent of the Nasdaq stockmarket at a special meeting held Thursday.

The deal passed by a comfortable margin, with 622 members voting in favor and 206 against. The merger needed the support of at least 576 members to pass. The exchanges said they hope to complete the union by the end of the year.

The merger unites the nation's second- and third-largest stock markets by folding the Amex into the larger National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD).

"The vote is over, the debate is over, and now it's time to move ahead together," said Amex Chairman Richard Syron, speaking on a conference call after the vote was taken.

Under terms of the merger, Nasdaq will commit $110 million over five years to upgrade Amex facilities and technology and spend $30 million on a joint marketing program. It will also spend $40 to $50 million to make sure the value of Amex seats does not deteriorate. The Amex will operate as a separate subsidiary.

The merger unites two formal rivals and distinctly different trading forums.

The Amex, an "open outcry" system where brokers shout prices on a trading floor, traces its beginning back nearly 150 years when brokers traded securities on a curbside in Manhattan.

The Nasdaq, in contrast, is a sprawling computer system that allows competing market-makers to display prices on computer screens. Founded just 27 years ago, it has managed to surpass the Amex in terms of new listings, including high-tech leaders Microsoft Corp. and Intel Corp.

The Nasdaq had listed 5,466 companies worth $1.9 trillion at the end of 1997, far above the $168 billion market value of the 783 companies on Amex.

While Amex has lagged its rivals in equities, it has made a strong name for itself in the options arena, second only to the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE). Aside from winning praise for innovative options products, the Amex also has a new strength -- its agreement to tie up with the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, also strong in options.

Together with the Philadelphia exchange, Amex said its options market share will nearly equal that of the CBOE.

"This is a new beginning for us, repositioning the Amex as a much more vibrant competitor in equities and an even more aggressive force in the options business," Syron said.

The merger is also expected to jump-start some consolidation among U.S. stock exchanges. Aside from the Philadelphia exchange's jump into the fray, other tie-ups are expected as large Wall Street firms move to cut the high costs of running a trading floor, analysts said.

Approval was largely expected after one of Wall Street's biggest players, Spear Leeds & Kellogg, bought out opposition leader Paul Liang. Liang owned a large block of seats on the exchange and had spearheaded opposition to the merger, claiming it would hurt the value of the seats. But Spear Leeds bought out Liang's 18 seats for a reported $7.1 million, effectively quashing the protest.

The two markets have said the merger will save "hundreds of millions" of costs over the next five years. An Amex spokesman said there was no word yet on any possible job cuts from the merger although analysts predicted that numerous cuts would result.

The combination must win regulatory approval and face a shareholder lawsuit brought by exchange member Selma Philipson. The lawsuit seeks to nullify the results of the membership vote, based on allegations that members had been given insufficient and misleading information.

Regulatory approval seems likely, Amex said. "We believe (regulators) are strongly positive toward the steps we are taking," an Amex official said.

The combined NASD/Amex is still dwarfed by the New York Stock Exchange, with a market capitalization of $11.8 billion.

Oil Service Stocks Downgraded By Jefferies & Company

Jefferies & Co analyst Roderick McKenzie said in a research report that he had downgraded 18 oil service stocks as a result of volatility in crude oil prices that could lead oil companies to cut their exploration and production budgets.

-- McKenzie said land and shallow-water markets have the biggest near-term risks, while there will be few changes in demand from deepwater projects.

-- Cut to accumulate from buy (corrects rating change) were Atwood Oceanics Inc. , Cliffs Drilling Co., Diamond Offshore Drilling Co. , Ensco International Inc. , Global Marine Inc. , Marine Drilling Cos. ,
Newpark Resources Inc. , Parker Drilling Co. , Petroleum Geo-Services A/S , Precision Drilling Corp. , R&B Falcon Corp. , Rowan Cos. Inc. , and Superior Energy Services Inc. .

-- Cut to hold from accumulate were Baker Hughes Inc. and Grey Wolf Inc. .

-- Cut to hold from buy were Maverick Tube Corp. , Nabors Industries Inc. , and Patterson Energy Inc. .

COUNTRIES IN THE NEWS

Oil Prices Wreak Havoc On Venezuela
Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela - Venezuelan business was booming just a few months ago, but a sharp drop in oil prices and the surging candidacy of a populist former coup leader have endangered growth prospects and unmasked the fragility of an economy plagued by decades of mismanagement.

The price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil hit a 12-year low last week of $8.43, wreaking havoc on the national budget and the confidence of investors already nervous over the possibility that former Lt. Col. Hugo Chavez, who tried to overthrow the government six years ago, will become president.

The Caracas stock exchange is down 40 percent since Jan. 1, the biggest plunge in Latin America, and consumer prices have risen 40 percent in the past year, the region's highest inflation rate. Officials estimate lower oil prices will cost the economy $5 billion this year.

''The economy is either looking at a recession or a very weak growth scenario,'' said Carl Ross, chief Latin American economist at BT Alex. Brown Inc. ''The short-term outlook depends on oil prices, and that's not a lot to hang your hat on these days.''

OPEC nations agreed Wednesday to new output cuts in an attempt to boost prices, but similar cuts in recent months failed to reverse a worldwide glut, which has hurt oil-producing countries everywhere from Saudi Arabia to Mexico.

Venezuela came surging back from a recession last year, when the economy grew by 5 percent. British Petroleum (NYSE/BP), Texaco and Mobil took advantage of the government's much-touted opening of the oil sector, and poured in hundreds of millions of dollars. Economists had predicted 4 percent growth for 1998.

Then came the plunge in oil prices and the Asian financial crisis. Venezuela will now be lucky if it grows 1 percent.

Oil accounts for more than three-quarters of Venezuela's export income, and about 60 percent of all government revenue. Officials have slashed this year's budget by $1.6 billion and asked Venezuelans, whose standard of living has fallen dramatically in recent years, to tighten their belts even further.

U.S. President Bill Clinton's entreaty at a recent regional summit in Chile for ''a second generation of reform'' to distribute Latin America's wealth more equitably seems a long way off in Venezuela. Social spending is taking a back seat to crisis management, and some officials can hardly hide their frustration.

''We don't need Clinton to tell us to invest in our people,'' Planning Minister Teodoro Petkoff told The Associated Press. ''Does he think he came up with Einstein's Theory of Relativity?''

Venezuela's efforts to get its economic house in order through austerity has led to a public backlash.

Chavez is leading the polls for December's presidential elections. Although he has toned town his populist rhetoric, most investors think he would turn back the clock on free-market reform, and many are already packing.

''If he surprises us and becomes a success story, there will be plenty of time to jump back on the bandwagon,'' said Rafael de la Fuente, an economist at the French bank Paribas. ''But I don't want to be there if he confirms all our worst fears.''

To raise cash and investor confidence, officials have announced two bond issues worth $1 billion and a $500 million loan from the InterAmerican Development Bank. They also plan to privatize the aluminum and electricity sectors.

The government has sought to fend off a devaluation at all costs, keeping both interest rates and the bolivar currency artificially high -- and putting the breaks on the economy.

Many people are asking themselves how the country with the most proven oil reserves outside the Middle East has become so poor. One reason is that oil income has allowed the country to ''muddle through'' without fundamental reform, said Ricardo Penfold, vice president of research at the Santander Investment Bank.

True, the country has welcomed foreign investment, eliminated trade barriers and privatized some state industries. Yet Venezuela has one of the most bloated bureaucracies on the continent. Its schools, roads and hospitals are decaying, tax collection is sorely deficient, corruption is endemic, and prosperity depends almost exclusively on volatile oil prices.

''All the money is stolen,'' said 48-year-old Caracas resident Omar Requena. ''What do they do with all that oil?''

Requena said he'll vote for Chavez.

Australia's Offshore Gas Industry Looks Homeward

Facing uncertainty in key Asian markets, Australia's emerging northwestern offshore petroleum industry hopes to sell more gas to domestic customers, industry executives said on Tuesday.

A handful of multinational oil companies, led by Royal/Dutch Shell (UK & Ireland: SHEL.L; RD.AS) and Phillips Petroleum Co (P), have staked claims to large tracks in the Timor Sea, which straddles Australian and Indonesian territorial waters.

Oil and gas developments in the region have always looked to Asia for ready markets. But as demand for energy slows in Asia in step with declining industrial and consumer activity so have sales of gas.

''Beyond Asia, we must also look to the domestic market,'' said Shell Development (Australia) Pty Ltd chairman Roland Williams.

The giant North West Shelf joint venture, operated by Woodside Petroleum Ltd (WPL.AX) and one-sixth owned by Shell, has so far been unable to negotiate a second generation of supply contracts to justify a proposed doubling of output for its longstanding Japanese customers.

The neigbouring Gorgon field, not yet developed but with the potential of being nearly as big as the North West Shelf, also has no customers.

A Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T) official this week told the Southeast Asia Australia Offshore conference that only a fraction of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) requirements to 2010 were still open and that there was no room for new projects in the Japanese market.

In Australia, gas production over the last five years has grown between 3.5 percent and 4.0 percent a year, with natural gas holding 18.1 percent of the primary energy market.

Shell and Woodside have proposed co-developing a liquefied natural gas procesing plant near Darwin capable of yielding 7.5 million tonnes of gas annually from the Timor Sea.

The companies hope to shore up long-term contracts with big mining and industrial firms in Australia, and with South Korea, India and China long before the first gas deliveries are ready in 2005, Williams said.

Deregulation of the Australian gas transmission system has opened up new opportunities to tap the domestic market, parts of which can be more far-reaching than Asia.

''In the longer term, the market opportunity for substantial quantities of Timor Sea gas includes the eastern states of Australia,'' said John Morris, assistant secretry of the Northern Territory Department of Mines and Energy.

Morris said the Northern Territory government is anxious to see gas from the Timor Sea available in Darwin beginning in 2002.

''Darwin already is dependent on natural gas from the Amadeus Basin, and there are limitations on supply,'' Morris said.

Thousands of kilometres to the east, the copper and zinc mining region of Mount Isa and the refining industries of nearby Townsville in Queensland state are going through a resources boom powered largely by local gas supplies.

''Both centres are new gas markets and of keen interest to the Timor Sea producers,'' Morris said.

A big drawbck to transporting gas across large areas in Australia has been a lack of connecting pipelines.

But in the wake of deregulation among the states and declining construction costs, more pipelines are expected to be built around the country.

''A number of factors have enabled construction costs to decline by nearly a third since 1981, Jim McDonald, general manager of Australian Gas Light Co (AGL.AX) said.

Development of the Timor Sea's gas reserves would be boosted with development of the Bayu-Undan and Sunrise and Troubador fields.

Bayu-Undan alone holds 3.2 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. It is jointly owned by The Broken Hill Pty Co ltd (BHP.AX), Phillips, Santos Ltd (STO.AX) Oryx, Hardy Petroleum (HOG.L) and Petroz (PTZ.AX).

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