Friday 27 November 2009

Dea Han New Pharm Let's Slip the Galaz Reserves

On 4 November, Roxi Petroleum announced that the Kazakhstan authorities were about to consider the revised reserves for the NW Konys field on the Galaz block, with results expected on 11 November.

We are still awaiting official confirmation from Roxi; but on 25 November, one of the shareholders of Baverstock (a major shareholder of Roxi), Dae Han New Pharm appears to have announced that the revised gross 2C reserves to GOST standards are 16 million barrels of oil (mmbo) (43.4% net to Roxi), compared to prior reserves of 12.6mmbo in the 2008 Annual Report.

This is somewhat below expectations of ~30mmbo, but is nevertheless an improvement. However, the numbers are coming from a Google translation of a page published in Korean, so we must treat this with some scepticism for the time being.

Links to:

Dae Han New Pharm website: https://www.dhnp.co.kr/default.asp

Dae Han press release from 25 November: https://www.dhnp.co.kr/news/notice_read.asp?id=80&page=1&pos=80

Note that unless you can read Korean, you will have to use a translation tool to understand what is being said.

Monday 23 November 2009

Arawak Exercises More Options in Roxi Petroleum (AIM:RXP)

In two recent announcements (03/11/09 and 23/11/09), Roxi Petroleum has raised a total of ~£1.5m through the exercise of just over 15m options at 10p each.

Options at 10p were issued to Arawak Energy Limited (now part of Vitol Group and now called Altius Energy) and Kuat Oraziman in the announcement made in June 2009 to bring in funds to finance bringing Galaz into production. Subsequently Mr. Oraziman sold his 36m options to Arawak for an undisclosed sum.

So, it seems likely that Arawak are the party exercising the options and they have now exercised ~15.5m of the 54m options they held. Interestingly, the exercise price rises to 15p/share at the end of March 2010. So, this exercise of options shows a welcome show of confidence in the company, especially as the mid price of Roxi shares today is some 9.5p. These transactions also provide working capital funding to the company without recourse to the GEM facility, and thus does not dilute existing shareholders more than has already been announced.

Edit: 2/12/09 according to today's announcement it seems as though Arawak Energy did not exercise the ~6.4m options exercised on 23 November. That remains a bit of a mystery.

Sunday 22 November 2009

Roxi Petroleum (RXP) Management and Advisors

The board of directors can be found on the Roxi Petroleum website.

Chairman: Clive Carver
CEO: David Wilkes (took over from Rob Schoobrood on 1 January 2010)
Finance Director: David Wilkes
Executive Director: Kuat Oraziman
Technical Director: Duncan McDougall
Operations Director: Hyunsik Jang
Non-Executive: Edmund Pery, Earl of Limerick
Company Secretary: Paul Puxon

The advisors can be found on the Roxi Petroleum website.

NOMAD and broker: Matrix Corporate Capital LLP
Auditors: BDO Stoy Hayward LLP
Competent Person: McDaniel & Associates Consultants Ltd
Financial Public Relations (PR): College Hill Associates Limited (according to a tweet on 1 April, the PR advisors are now Buchanan Communications)

Tuesday 17 November 2009

Results of Roxi Petroleum (RXP) General Meeting

As expected, the Roxi Petroleum general meeting to approve the transaction to fund the exploration and appraisal of the BNG block went ahead today, and the resolution was duly passed.

Details of the circular can be found here.

There were some interesting questions after the formal part of the meeting, and the discussion is reported below.

1) Attendees. The meeting was sparsely attended: your author, someone from Arawak and four others, although a fifth other person did arrive part way through. I think I recall the chairman saying ony 2 people were entitled to vote and one of those was me; however he was holding about 150m proxies in favour of the transaction. All the directors were there.

2) Galaz. The reserves upgrade is being considered by the Khazakstan authorities now. I think the company had anticipated receiving the results by now and described the decision as "imminent". Someone asked about the potential deal with LG. It seems another party may interested; there was talk of negotiating an "exclusivity fee". Kuat Oraziman said he hoped to get to some sort of resolution by the end of this month. I guess investors ought to continue to be patient as these deals can take a good while to pull together. The existing wells that have been drilled are currently shut-in pending commencement of pilot production which may be expected during 2Q10. They will start production slowly and build to 1,000-1,500bopd by year end 2010. There was some clarification of the new exploration target announced on 4 November; this is targeting Arksum and Upper Jurassic sands that are a bit deeper than the existing wells but in the same formation. This is not the deeper target indicated earlier. Well cost should be in the region of $1.5m.

3) Ravninnoe. Well #20 drilling ahead at 1,600m. We might expect some news around Xmas. I clarified the target depth. The AGM presentation had a well design that indicated a target depth of 3,800m that may have explored the lower-Carboniferous as well as appraising the mid-Carboniferous primary target at 3,200m. They confirmed the well location is not optimal for the deeper target, so they probably won't drill as far as 3,800m. Although Duncan McDougal did say if they still had oil shows at 3,500m they would carry on.

4) BNG. Once the paperwork aurrounding the BNG deal sanctioned today is completed, they hope to get drilling on BNG ASAP. Applications and permits are in progress. Whilst they would hope to commence drilling in December, 1Q10 is a more realistic target. They will start by drilling the G-54 wells. I asked about the tantalising target just below in the Tertiary, and they will consider it; but not with the first well. The decision on the location of the first deep well has yet to be taken, so it may not be Y-1. For more detail on the BNG block see here and here

5) BNG seismics and volumetrics. I asked when they would update the market on these results. Rob Schoonbrood indicated they were encouraged by the results so far and Duncan McDougal said they would probably release the results during 1Q10. After the meeting I mentioned that the fully diluted EV of MXP was ~£300m at present, compared to RXP's ~£40m (OK a bit more with the warrants, options and the small amount of debt) and the only material thing MXP has over and above RXP is that MXP have gone to market with their volumetrics. I do hope that point hit home and leads to an acceleration of the release of data.

6) Finance. Someone asked when the company was going to come to market for more cash. Clive Carver answered that there were no current plans to do so. So, I guess they hope Arawak exercise more warrants to ensure they have enough cash to fund overheads until production from Galaz or BNG kicks in. Of course, if Galaz is sold the short term cash needs for funding overheads (remember drilling on Rav and BNG is funded for a good while) goes away anyway; and there's ~$7m of the $57m BNG money coming to Roxi as well. Interestingly, RS talked about the $50m coming from Canamens that goes to drill BNG. As aficianandos will know, this will be loaned to BNG BV, but $32.5m comes back to Roxi from future production and $17.5m goes to Canamens. RS indicated that Roxi will eventually get the full $50m back, with the balance coming back from Baverstock as "compensation".

7) Futures. I chatted a bit at the end to Rob Schoonbrood and Duncan McDougal. Although there is still a theoretical possiblity of doing some sort of deal on ADA; personally I'm now discounting it. However, "the coffin" part of BNG not yet operated by Roxi may well become available during 2010. I congratulated them both on not re-pricing their options which they accepted gracefully, but they are confident of making a significant amount on those options over time - their targets are very ambitious. RS even suggested any further significant dilution (my guess beyond say 500m shares which is about the fully diluted position now, ex-GEM) would only be done to fund acquisition of further assets.

Overall, it is pleasing to see the BNG deal finally done - they did say there is very little chance of this deal falling apart and no risk of any further taking back of assets by Baverstock. It is good to see we are drilling in Ravninnoe now and will be drilling BNG shortly. Galaz reserves upgrade imminent, and if we are lucky a Christmas present of good news from Ravninnoe and a deal to sell all or part of Galaz. However, investors ought not to get their hopes up about the timing of any news release about the BNG seismic coming any time soon. Hopefully, getting this deal out of the way ought to now pave the way for Matrix Corporate Capital to release their long awaited broker note to drum up some institutional interest.

Monday 9 November 2009

Satellite Imagery of BNG?





A link has been posted on the web that appears to show the giant 8bn barrels of oil Tengiz field, and a nearby area labelled IV. It does appear as though this IV zone may cover some of Roxi Petroleum's BNG block (also known as Ayrshagyl).


As a way of at least partially verifiying this data, the recently discovered Taq Taq block in Kurdistan is clearly shown on a different page accessed from the above link ( http://www.scotforth.com/index.php?page=kurdistan )

Friday 6 November 2009

Roxi Petroleum (RXP) BNG Block Seismic Results

Looking at the image above (that can be enlarged by clicking on it), taken from Slide 8 of the Roxi Petroleum (RXP) AGM Presentation from July 2009, it looks like there are more targets in this part of the BNG block (also known as Ayrshagyl) than were discovered in Soviet times. We know already about G-54 (aka Yelemes), the likely target of the first wells Roxi will drill on the block and G-1, presumably the pre-salt target discussed in the same presentation.



However, two other targets appear on this slide, the Triassic truncation play and the Upper Permian truncation play. Is it possible that Roxi will consider deepening one of the 3 new Yelemes G-54 wells to test the Triassic play type?

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Roxi Petroleum (RXP) Releases Galaz Update

Today Roxi Petroleum (AIM:RXP) announced an update on its Galaz asset in Kazakhstan.

Unfortunately, it has not been possible to conclude a deal to sell all or part of the asset to LG of Korea under the exclusive MoU announced on 17 July. However, Roxi and LG are still discussing a deal, and Roxi has recommenced discussions with other interested parties; which bodes well for getting achieving full value in any full or part sale.

More interesting is that a reserves upgrade report has been submitted to the state authorities that will be reviewed today, with the results of the review expected to be received by 11 November. Some think the expected 2C classification will be of the order of 30mmbo (gross, of which Roxi share 43.4%). Following the classification to GOST standards, Roxi will then determine the reserves classification to western SPE standards. If expectations of 30mmbo gross recoverable reserves are correct; applying a multiple of $5/bbl would equate to a Roxi share worth ~$60-65m, or close to the current market capitalisation which would mean the BNG, Ravninnoe, Munaily and Beibars assets are in the price for almost nothing.

Further, after the reserves approval, Roxi will submit a pilot production plan and would expect approval, and presumably production start, in 1Q10. So, if the asset is not sold, Roxi will gain valuable cashflow. [Edit: Expectations of 2Q10 production start were set at the GM held on 17 November 2009. See report here].

Finally, Roxi has identified a deeper exploration target in the south of the acreage and plans to drill an exploration well to test the Arksum and Jurassic reservoirs to a depth of 2,200m . Roxi has completed tenders for the well, and hopes to start drilling by 2Q2010. After this well is completed, it is expected that 20km2 of new 3D seismic will be collected over the recently acquired northern portion of the block.