RE:RE:RE:RE:FCF calculations for perspective Fcf might get "used up" on capex,buyback,debt repay,etc but a large proportion of expenses do not go up because wti and revenue goes up. Or the cost goes up less. Eg. If wti goes from 40 to 80, revenue will double. But expenses, like head office overhead does not double. Neither do the field costs of operating a well. Or transportation costs. Etc etc. FCF will grow, all else equal, more exponentially than straight line of flat amount. Using your data points and numbers I pull out of my keester, @80 wti, FCF =550+. In 2020 we saw it work exponentially in reverse.
2021Gamble wrote: @bully88.....yes, that would be 'a conservative' way to do the math....
Bully88 wrote: 1234bmth wrote: Based on Jun presentation, $250M FCF is on $55 WTI assumptions not $60. At $60 WTI the projected FCF is &300M.
Does this mean
$65 350m
$70 400m
$75 450m
$80 500m
??
Bully