This is a well you don’t want to miss.
In Namibia, an African venue that is being set up as the scene of the world’s next—and possibly last—major onshore oil discovery, the oil and gas rights to an entire 8.5-million-acre sedimentary basin are owned by a single, small company.
Now, Wood Mackenzie, the most trusted name in oil and gas resource assessments, has issued a report stating that this same basin is analogous to three world-class basins, including the $540-billion Midland Basin in Texas .
The rig is now on-site, and the drilling has just begun on what could be the most exciting onshore oil play in decades. They’ve spudded their first 6-2 exploration well and are looking at three wells, back-to-back and 400km of 2D seismic over the next 2 quarters.
One of the most respected petroleum geochemists in the world, Dan Jarvie, came out of retirement for this play and believes this could be one of the largest oil basins worldwide, and his conservative estimate is that it could hold over 100 billion barrels of oil .
Just 40 days from now, the first well should be complete …
And just a few weeks after that, the analytical results should start coming in.
This could become a New Year bonanza for an oil and gas industry that has seen “discovery” become an obsolete word.
The bonanza gets multiple times bigger when we’re talking about a junior company with the kind of upside only a junior player can have …
A discovery barely moves the needle on an integrated supermajor that’s typically involved in drilling a basin of this scope and scale.
But for a junior, even the start of a drill can have maximum impact on share prices…
The basin that’s caught the attention of Wood Mackenzie is the Kavango Basin in Namibia and Botswana.
And the junior company stealing the show is Reconnaissance Energy Africa ( TSX:RECO .V , OTCMKTS:RECAF )
As the drilling starts, here are 5 reasons to put Recon Africa on your watchlist:
#1 This ‘African Permian’ Play Is Considered Analogous to the Midland Basin
Massively underexplored Africa is most likely the only place in the world left where we can possibly anticipate a major onshore oil and gas discovery. If that ends up being Namibia--all the more exciting. This under-explored country has never produced a single barrel of oil in its history. Either onshore or offshore and has excellent fiscal terms and infrastructure.
Exxon (NYSE:XOM) has already scooped up an additional 7 million net acres offshore …
But onshore, it’s all about Recon Africa, which strategically swooped in to acquire the rights to the entire Kavango sedimentary basin from Namibia all the way to Botswana.
That’s a basin over 8.5 million acres, almost the size of Switzerland.
And it’s analogous to three major world basins, according to Wood Mackenzie: The Midland Basin in Texas, the Southern North Sea Basin in the Netherlands and the UK and the Doba Basin in Chad, Africa. And we are talking about CONVENTIONAL production here, no fracking, low water use, ‘normal’ decline curves and low cost per BOE. For us in North America it may be a memory, but all major basins begin their life with conventional production, unconventional / shale coming as the last gasp late in life. Production in the Midland Basin began in the 30’s, unconventional just a decade or so ago.
Source: Wood Mackenzie/Recon Africa
World renowned geochemist Dan Jarvie puts Kavango’s potential oil generated at an estimated 100+billion barrels—
When Kavango first came to the world’s attention a few years ago, another world-renowned geologist and geophysicist, Bill Cathey, who works with the oil and gas supermajors, studied the basin and said: “Nowhere in the world is there a sedimentary basin this deep that does not produce commercial hydrocarbons.”
Then, Jarvie , a key force behind the Barnett Gas play and former chief geochemist for EOG Resources, jumped in on RECO as a shareholder because he saw a “very strong, independent junior explorer… sitting on a sedimentary basin that rivals South Texas in a massively underexplored region”.
The estimates here have gone from 12 billion barrels to 18 billion barrels to 100+ billion.
That makes for an exciting first drill.
Jarvie’s own estimates 100+billion barrels of oil equivalent are based only on 12% of Recon Africa’s ( TSX:RECO .V, OTCMKTS:RECAF ) total holdings.
#2 Analyst Coverage Is Decidedly Bullish—It Just Nearly Doubled
Haywood is all over this one.
In early November, Haywood initiated coverage with a short-term $2.50 price on RECO because the company is “set and funded to de-risk a potentially material resource play onshore Namibia and Botswana with 1,348 mmbbls/58.1 Tcf, a conservative estimated prospective recoverable resource (gross).”
In arriving at its 12-month target price of $2.50/share, Haywood has risked this upside potential by a 6% chance of commercialization. In other words, they’re playing it uber-cautious with the $2.50 price tag. The potential upside for a junior company sitting on a supermajor basin all by itself is rather mind-blowing.
But in December Haywood raised its short term price target to $4.00 per share.
More to the point, Haywood recommended “accumulating a position ahead of drilling/evaluation news flow in H1/21 aimed at proving up the presence of a working hydrocarbons system, which if confirmed, should provide abundant opportunities for further exploration and appraisal drilling”.
“On a successful discovery, attractive fiscal terms should help to facilitate the development of the basin, thereby increasing the chance of commercialization and shareholder value”.
Haywood is also hanging on Dan Jarvie’s expertise here, with good reason. So, given the scale of the basin--again, we’re talking about 8.5 million acres--a discovery would present manifold opportunities for strategic joint ventures for further de-risking--without share equity dilution.
In its analysis, Haywood notes the 1,000% return potential for junior oil discovery projects during the exploration phase. And in the same breath, calls RECO an “attractive high-risk/high-reward investment opportunity” that could “experience “rapid value accretion” on success and/or anticipation of success.
It could be worth “multiples of its current valuation”, says Haywood.
And now, that story just got even better ….
In late December, when the drill rig arrived on site, Haywood nearly doubled its short-term price target from $2.50 to $4.00 .
#3 Drilling Just Started ….
With the drill bit just hitting the ground on this massive African Permian play, If Dan Jarvie Is Right, RECO could end up going from a small-cap to a multi-billion-dollar company. And we’ll find out pretty quickly.
Jarvie charts it out like this:
And if the analysis is right about the how much oil potential this play has, and development costs look anything close to this ….
Then early investors could be oil millionaires if this turns up a major discovery.
Torridon Investments has also initiated coverage, calling Recon Africa ( TSX:RECO .V , OTCMKTS:RECAF ) a “corporate story with a dedicated and internationally first-class management and technical team”.
“They’re implementing the same plan in Namibia … that similar companies successfully have done in the US. However, Namibia is cheaper to operate in, thus opex relative to a barrel can be lower than in the US. Also, more net revenue from a unit of gross stays in the company coffers given the favourable royalty regime,” Torridon notes.
For these exploration plays, it’s all about the speed of de-risking, and this one is fast-paced. Not only have the estimates just kept rising profoundly but RECO is on track to keep de-risking in a short period of time.
That’s why Haywood is eyeing the potential here for material near-term upside.
And the catalysts are all there, with the drill bit already hitting the ground in a 6-2 well spud.
Next comes 2D seismic acquisition and interpretation in Q1 2021, followed by 6-2 well evaluation and drilling of two other back-to-back wells in the same quarter.
By the second half of this year, it’s likely RECO will already be in JV discussions if drilling goes as planned.
#4 This is the grand oil lottery
This is the oil lottery, but Recon Africa ( TSX:RECO .V , OTCMKTS:RECAF ) is not your average wildcatter.
This is something entirely different.
This is one of those oil opportunities that almost never comes around.
This is a “high-conviction play”, according to Torrindo’s coverage, with a basin that is “one of the most significant underdeveloped basins of such depth globally”.
“The significance of this geological formation is that ALL such basins in the world with similar depth and general geological characteristics produce commercially viable hydrocarbons.”
This where some of the world’s most respected names in the industry come together to find the next—and possibly last—huge, onshore oil discovery, putting Namibia on the oil map for the first time in history, and possibly helping RECO evolve into a major oil company.
Recon Africa has put together a veritable “who’s who” exploration and technical team to move this project forward with some of the most qualified and successful oil “finders” in the business.
- Jay Park, RECO COB and director, is a veteran energy lawyer with tons of Africa experience and was designated Queen’s Counsel in Canada in 2011. He’s advised oil companies and governments in 50 countries, and he has a following of the best of the best.
- Scot Evans CEO, Geologist, new fields expert, is an energy industry leader with a combined 35 years of experience with Exxon, Landmark Graphics and Halliburton.
- Daniel Jarvie is globally recognized as a leading analytical and interpretive organic geochemist of Barnett Gas fame, and “Hart Energy’s Most Influential People for the Petroleum Industry in the Next Decade.”
- Nick Steinberger, a world-class drilling completion expert and manager of the drilling company; yes Recon Africa owns its own rig that if picked up for a song in the downturn.
- Bill Cathey is a geophysicist to the supermajors, including Chevron, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips … major and large.
- This is the best of the best--all of them confident in the chance of discovering the largest oil play in the last 20 to 30 years.
But with the drill already hitting the ground, early-in opportunities are dwindling.
And still, their stock is way under the radar with no valuation for discovery. That ’ s exactly the setup that rarely comes along: A dream team, a massive basin all to a single junior, and estimates by first-class geoscientists that make this potentially more rewarding than any oil play this decade. For Haywood, among others, it ’ s a risk worth taking … right now, while it ’ s still in this price range.
Other companies to watch as oil stages a comeback:
Norwegian oil and gas giant Equinor ASA (NYSE:EQNR) is one of a handful of oil companies that managed to turn a profit in the tumultuous market after its oil storage bet paid off big time. Equinor reported a surprise adjusted net income of $646M for the second quarter, trouncing Wall Street’s expectations for a loss of $250M thanks to huge trading profits despite a huge 53 percent plunge in revenue to $8.04B.
Equinor has has taken a technology-driven approach to the oil price crash in a way that few other companies have been able to. It’s even brought the “remote” work idea to its oil rigs. Equinor’s Valemon, situated 160km from land, contains about 192 million barrels of oil equivalent. Its remote employees are expected to spend two weeks a year on the vessel to familiarize themselves with the space, alleviating some of these safety concerns. After that, however, they can work remotely.
Equinor is also using that tech edge to go green. In fact, it has just done something no other oil major has ever done – developed an offshore wind project to power its oil rigs. The $490-million (5 billion kroner) project will reduce the use of gas turbines for power generation, consequently lowering the emissions of carbon dioxide from the five platforms by some 200,000 tons annually and emissions of nitrous oxides by 1,000 tons.
While Equinor’s share price was hit hard in March 2020, it is already trading near its January 2020 prices thanks to its innovative approach to the crisis. And as the green push accelerates, Equinor may emerge as one of the most balanced energy companies in the business, making it particularly appealing as many other oil companies fall out of favor with investors.
Crescent Point Energy Corp. (NYSE:CPG, TSX:CPG) was another Canadian oil producer that struggled in the oil price crisis of last year. The mid-cap company saw its share price tumble from a January high of $4.56 to an all-time low of just $0.70 as oil demand dissipated and prices tumbled into the negatives in a historically bad first-quarter. The terrible year forced the company to lower output and capex forecasts for 2021.
Despite its struggles, however, Crescent has seen its share price climb significantly over the past month. The 28% gain may just be the beginning of a turnaround for the embroiled Canadian oil giant. In fact, it has even received a ‘strong buy’ signal from analysts at Zack’s thanks to its strong price performance and improving technical.
In addition to bullish news from OPEC and Asian demand recovery, Canada’s oil sands are looking a bit more positive as well. According to government data, the controversial oil sands hit record-production in November and will likely continue to grow throughout the year. This turnaround in Canadian oil will likely be a boon for Crescent, and a full recovery is looking evermore probable.
Matt Murphy, an analyst with energy research firm Tudor Pickering Holt explained, “There will be a bit of incremental growth in excess of this record,” adding, “Our model shows the oil sands getting to 3.3 million bpd by the middle of 2021.”
Another way to gain some indirect exposure to the oil recovery is through AutoCanada (TSX:ACQ), a company that operates auto-dealerships through Canada. The company carries a wide variety of new and used vehicles and has all types of financial options available to fit the needs of any consumer. While sales have slumped this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, AutoCanada will likely see a rebound as both buying power recovers along with jobs and the economy in Canada.
Teck Resources (TSX:TECK) could be one of the best-diversified miners out there, with a broad portfolio of Copper, Zinc, Energy, Gold, Silver and Molybdenum assets. It’s even involved in the oil scene! Its free cash flow and a lower volatility outlook for base metals in combination with a the growing worry of another COVID-19 wave, Teck could see its share price continue to climb.
Though Teck has not quite returned to its January highs, it has seen a promising rebound since April lows. In addition to its positive trajectory, the company has seen a fair amount of insider buying, which tells shareholders that the management team is serious about continuing to add shareholder value. In addition to insider buying, Teck has been added to a number of hedge fund portfolios as well, suggesting that not only do insiders believe in the company, but also the smart money that’s really driving the markets.
Turquoise Hill Resources (TSX:TRQ) is a mid-cap Canadian mineral exploration and development company headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia. Its focus is on the Pacific Rim where it is in the process of developing several large mines. The company mines a diversified set of metals/minerals including Coal, Gold, Copper, Molybdenum, Silver, Rhenium, Uranium, Lead, Zinc and even Oil. One of the fortes of Turquoise hill is its good relationship with mining giant Rio Tinto.
Turquoise Hill is largely considered to be undervalued among analysts. It’s currently trading at $0.79 per share, offering investors of all levels an easy way to gain exposure to a number of key metals and minerals. The company has some momentum working for it, as well. After falling to an all-time low of $0.37 per share back in March, the company has seen its stock price rise by 113%.
As one of the biggest names in energy, Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) has adopted a number of high-tech solutions for finding, pumping, storing, and delivering its resources. Not only is it big in the oil sector, however, it is a leader in renewable energy. Recently, the company invested $300 million in a wind farm located in Alberta.
When the rebound in crude prices finally materializes, giants like Suncor are sure to do well out of it. While many of the oil majors have given up on oil sands production – those who focus on technological advancements in the area have a great long-term outlook. And that upside is further amplified by the fact that it is currently looking particularly under-valued compared to its peers.
By. Cliff Shrew
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Forward-Looking Statements. Statements contained in this document that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements that involve various risks and uncertainty affecting the business of Recon. All estimates and statements with respect to Recon’s operations, its plans and projections, size of potential oil reserves, comparisons to other oil producing fields, oil prices, recoverable oil, production targets, production and other operating costs and likelihood of oil recoverability are forward-looking statements under applicable securities laws and necessarily involve risks and uncertainties including, without limitation: risks associated with oil and gas exploration, timing of reports, development, exploitation and production, geological risks, marketing and transportation, availability of adequate funding, volatility of commodity prices, imprecision of reserve and resource estimates, environmental risks, competition from other producers, government regulation, dates of commencement of production and changes in the regulatory and taxation environment. Actual results may vary materially from the information provided in this document, and there is no representation that the actual results realized in the future will be the same in whole or in part as those presented herein. Other factors that could cause actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements are also set forth in filings that Recon and its technical analysts have made, We undertake no obligation, except as otherwise required by law, to update these forward-looking statements except as required by law.
Exploration for hydrocarbons is a speculative venture necessarily involving substantial risk. Recon's future success will depend on its ability to develop its current properties and on its ability to discover resources that are capable of commercial production. However, there is no assurance that Recon's future exploration and development efforts will result in the discovery or development of commercial accumulations of oil and natural gas. In addition, even if hydrocarbons are discovered, the costs of extracting and delivering the hydrocarbons to market and variations in the market price may render uneconomic any discovered deposit. Geological conditions are variable and unpredictable. Even if production is commenced from a well, the quantity of hydrocarbons produced inevitably will decline over time, and production may be adversely affected or may have to be terminated altogether if Recon encounters unforeseen geological conditions. Adverse climatic conditions at such properties may also hinder Recon's ability to carry on exploration or production activities continuously throughout any given year.
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