Energy companies jostle for ground in the Montney but Calima Energy stands alone

Calima Energy’s share price has more than doubled in the last month off the back of developments within the group, merger and acquisition activity, improving gas prices and the valuation of the group’s infrastructure.

However, based on developments within the group, merger and acquisition activity adjacent to its assets, improving gas prices and the valuation of the group’s infrastructure, the company looks outstanding value relative to its conservative market capitalisation of less than $20 million.

Calima’s assets are located in the onshore Montney Formation, the most active oil and gas play in Canada.

Montney now plays host to major energy companies including ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP), who have been jostling for acreage here, with a number of significant deals putting the region in the spotlight.

In July 2020, ConocoPhillips entered the Montney consolidation race by acquiring a large portion of Kelt Exploration’s Montney position in a C$550 million transaction, equating to a valuation of $2,000 per undeveloped acre.

In August 2020, Canadian Natural Resources (CNRL) announced the acquisition of Montney producer, Painted Pony for C$469 million. This equates to a valuation metric of ~C$2,500 per developed acre.

The flurry of activity in the Montney (as seen below) has been keenly observed by Calima, which is the only ASX listed company with Montney acreage.

Calima owns a large contingent resource across more than 60,000 acres (a 100 per cent working interest) in the Montney Formation, plus important infrastructure, giving it a commanding position.

Calima Energy’s core assets, the Calima Lands, lie within the liquids rich gas sweet-spot of the Montney Formation and have a contingent resource of 1.15 tcfe (trillion cubic feet equivalent) and a prospective resource of 2.18 tcfe gas.

The company also owns the Tommy Lakes facilities and infrastructure, which provide Calima with pipeline access to regional, national, and US markets. These assets alone have a replacement value of C$85 million.

The Calima Lands are development ready with infrastructure capacity of up to 50 million cubic feet of gas per day and 2,500 barrels of oil per day.

The company is currently completing a resource reclassification of 249 billion cubic feet of gas and 12.4 million barrels of liquids from ‘development on hold’ to ‘development pending’.

A favourable gas market

Like any commodity, oil and gas prices are influenced by supply and demand, but there have been external factors placing downward pressure on Canadian oil and gas.

Stepping back to 2018/19, Canadian producers were delivering maximum condensate volumes, resulting in gas oversupply.

At the same time, North American competitors were achieving peak production levels with volumes of associated gas increasing.

However, the landscape has changed and the Canadian market is improving with gas storage now at a 10 year low.

Coinciding with this development has been a decline in Permian gas rates in North America, highlighted by the 77 per cent fall in operational drill rigs, which is also a strong lead indicator of near to medium-term production.

Between November 2019 and May 2020, US oil production fell by 1.5 million barrels, and output is expected to decline by nearly 20 per cent by March 2021.

In tandem with this trend, gas production also contracted, and by March 2021 it is expected to be 83.6 billion cubic feet per day, down from 92.2 billion cubic feet per day in 2019.

This has had a positive impact on pricing in Canada with an approximate 100 per cent year-on-year increase: also note that the price is forecast to be above C$2.50 per gigajoule into 2021 and 2022.

Canadian gas prices have risen substantially over the past six months, with spot prices over C$2.50/gigajoule (GJ) in August, which has spurred on the M&A activity in the Montney.

Furthermore, declining production is strengthening North American gas pricing, making that market more lucrative for Canadian exporters.

Could Calima attract a suitor?

Calima has converted a significant portion of its acreage into 10-year leases expiring in 2029.

The company earned the right to make this conversion based on the total metres drilled during its successful 2019 three-well drilling campaign.

The British Columbia Department of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources has granted the conversion of 49 sections of land covering 33,643 acres, representing 56 per cent of Calima’s Core Lands.

It is worth noting that there is no obligation to drill any further wells to hold the Lease until 2029.

The remainder of the Calima Lands are held under 5-year drilling licences which require drilling to enable further conversions to be made.

Most of the remaining licences over the Core Lands mature in 2022.

This makes Calima even more attractive to a potential suitor as there is reliability of access returned 10 years.

While the company doesn’t boast large production, crunching the numbers relating to the value of its acreage and vital infrastructure is the key to attributing an appropriate valuation.

Considering the value of Calima’s resource and its Tommy Lakes infrastructure, Calima could be in line for a significant share price rerating or could, itself, become the subject of a merger and acquisition transaction.

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