阿根廷页岩油钻探先驱的 1,400% 涨势取决于总统改革以解锁多产的 Vaca Muerta 油田

乔纳森·吉尔伯特,彭博社 2024 年 5 月 23 日

(彭博社)“米格尔·加卢西奥(Miguel Galuccio)了解页岩。

米格尔·加卢西奥(摄影:Victor J. Blue/彭博社)

他是阿根廷蓬勃发展的创始人之一,领导了对阿根廷著名的瓦卡穆尔塔(Vaca Muerta)油气田的首次入侵。页岩气田在被发现后闲置了近一个世纪,直到加卢乔接管国营 YPF SA 为止。

但直到加卢乔创办了自己的企业 Vista Energy,石油才真正开始从巴塔哥尼亚干旱的西部边缘的储量中流出。作为回报,他也赚了一大笔钱。 Vista在纽约上市的股票在过去三年里上涨了约1,400%,轻松击败全球约100家价值10亿美元或以上的石油钻探公司中的所有其他公司。加卢乔持有的 7.9% 股份目前价值约 3.7 亿美元。

他说,维斯塔和阿根廷的下一个篇章及其雄心勃勃的全行业计划,以增加原油出口,现在不仅掌握在加卢乔手中,而且掌握在总统哈维尔·米莱手中。

距离四年任期仅几个月的米莱承诺,将通过放松对该国严格控制的经济的管制,进入阿根廷领导人三十年来从未成功尝试过的领域。但他的标志性立法仍需要赢得国会的批准,该立法将印证他对经济(包括自由石油市场)的自由主义愿景。 Milei 尚未成功取消对进口设备和资金流动的限制,而这些限制是投资者的祸根。

阿根廷页岩油领导者的计划至关重要,他们预测,到 2030 年,仅瓦卡穆尔塔的原油日产量就可以达到 1 百万桶,大约是现在的三倍。这对于预计未来几年燃料消耗量将接近创纪录水平的世界来说影响不小,特别是当地球上几乎没有油田能够产生这种增长时。

加卢西奥在纽约彭博总部接受采访时表示:“如果我们想要增长到 1 MMbbl,我们每年必须增加 5 台钻井平台,为此需要让阿根廷更具投资价值。”

米雷——就像他之前的三届连续政府一样,也促进了页岩钻探——释放瓦卡穆尔塔的既得利益,因为原油是为阿根廷带来额外出口收入的相对较快的途径。这数十亿美元对于扭转正在走向十年来第六次衰退的经济至关重要。

“他有北极星,无论如何他都会朝那个方向前进,”加卢西奥在谈到米莱的亲商业意识形态时说道。

但由于米雷面临高通胀,他的一些进展比投资者希望的要慢。布宜诺斯艾利斯咨询公司 Empiria 的首席经济学家尼古拉斯·加达诺 (Nicolas Gadano) 表示,特别是对于页岩钻探商来说,阿根廷每桶石油的价格仍然低于全球基准,而且资本管制仍然存在。

加达诺说:“伊莱纯粹出于试图减缓通货膨胀的务实理由,开始缓和或改变他的信念,这就是黄色交通灯。” “持续的资本管制意味着,虽然 Vista 仍然可以投资其现金流,但扩大支出或其他公司引入新投资都非常困难。”

阿根廷目前页岩油日产量超过 35 万桶(三分之一用于出口),在冬季需求高峰期,相当于另外 50 万桶页岩气和致密气。这只是钻探者在美国多产的二叠纪盆地生产的一小部分

布宜诺斯艾利斯 Balanz Capital 的研究分析师 Oriana Covault 表示,“尽管交易倍数很高,但斯塔能够在其页岩气领域展现出巨大的经济效益,并不断超出预期,证明了股价上涨的合理性。”

加卢乔是一个农业省份店主的儿子,他在布宜诺斯艾利斯接受了工程师培训,并在职业生涯早期在阿根廷偏南的油田和美国工作过。 56 岁的他现在是大型油田服务提供商 SLB 的董事会成员。他于 2017 年创立了 Vista。

加卢西奥表示,无论 Milei 实施全面改革的努力发生什么情况,Vista 投资者都应该指望该公司能够在 2026 年实现每天 10 万桶石油和天然气的产量指导。

“我们将实现我们的 2026 年计划,”他说。 “发生的任何其他事情都会使我们更具投资性,并且可能会给其他人带来机会。”

虽然 Vista(阿拉伯联合酋长国政府机构为其最大股东)帮助促进了 Vaca Muerta 的增长,但 YPF 仍然轻松地成为最大生产商。在 Milei 任命的新管理层的领导下,在管道扩建的推动下,这家国营钻探公司准备加速页岩气作业。

埃克森美孚出价。与此同时,一场包括 Vista 在内的竞购战正在进行,旨在收购埃克森美孚公司曾经计划开发的页岩油区块。

埃克森美孚正在退出瓦卡穆尔塔,因为它将把精力集中在其他地方,包括圭亚那。这是大型石油公司如何涉足而不是拥抱阿根廷页岩油的一个例子。这些公司因政府干预石油价格和出口而望而却步,尤其是货币管制,阻止它们自由地将现金转移到其他国家。

这就是为什么加卢乔如此渴望看到他们消失。

“放松资本管制可能是阿根廷加速瓦卡穆尔塔开发的主要单一因素,”加卢乔说。

原文链接/WorldOil

Argentine shale oil drilling pioneer’s 1,400% rally hinges on presidential reforms to unlock prolific Vaca Muerta field

Jonathan Gilbert, Bloomberg May 23, 2024

(Bloomberg) – Miguel Galuccio knows shale.

Miguel Galuccio (Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg)

He was a founder of Argentina’s burgeoning boom, leading the first incursions into its heralded oil and gas field known as Vaca Muerta, or dead cow. The shale patch stood idle for nearly a century after its discovery until Galuccio took the reins at state-run YPF SA.

But it wasn’t until Galuccio started his own venture, Vista Energy, that oil really started to flow from the reserves tucked into an arid western edge of Patagonia. And he’s made a fortune in return. Vista’s New York-traded shares are up about 1,400% in the past three years, easily beating every other of the roughly 100 global oil drillers worth $1 billion or more. Galuccio’s 7.9% stake is now valued at some $370 million.

The next chapter — for both Vista and Argentina, with its ambitious industry-wide plans to ramp up crude exports — now lies not just in Galuccio’s hands, he says, but in those of President Javier Milei.

Milei, who’s just months into a four-year term, pledges to go where no Argentine leader has successfully ventured for three decades by deregulating the country’s tightly controlled economy. But his signature legislation, which would stamp his libertarian vision on the economy — including free oil markets — still needs to win approval in congress. And Milei hasn’t yet managed to scrap restrictions on importing equipment and money flows, which are the bane of investors.

At stake are the plans of Argentina’s shale leaders who forecast that daily production of crude alone in Vaca Muerta can reach 1 MMbbl in 2030, about triple what it is today. That’s of no small consequence to a world predicted to consume near-record amounts of the fuel in the years ahead, especially when there are few oil fields left on the planet that can generate that kind of growth.

“If we want to grow to 1 MMbbl, we have to add five rigs every year, and making Argentina even more investable is required to do that,” Galuccio said in an interview at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York.

Milei — like three straight governments before his that also promoted shale drilling — has a vested interest in unleashing Vaca Muerta since crude is a relatively quick route to bringing extra export revenue to Argentina. Those billions of dollars are vital to turning around an economy that’s headed for its sixth recession in a decade.

“He has that North Star, and he’s going in that direction no matter what,” Galuccio said, referring to Milei’s pro-business ideology.

But some of Milei’s progress has been slower than investors would like as he contends with high inflation. In particular for shale drillers, said Nicolas Gadano, chief economist of Buenos Aires consultancy firm Empiria, barrels of oil in Argentina still fetch less than global benchmarks and capital controls remain in place.

“Milei, on the purely pragmatic grounds of trying to slow inflation, is beginning to moderate or backpedal on his convictions, and that’s a yellow traffic light,” Gadano said. “Continued capital controls mean that, while Vista can still invest its cashflow, it’s very difficult to scale up spending or for other companies to bring in new investments.”

Argentina currently produces more than 350,000 bpd of shale oil — it exports one third — and, during the height of winter demand, the equivalent of another 500,000 bbl of shale and tight gas. That’s just a fraction of what drillers churn out in the prolific Permian basin in the U.S.

“Vista was able to show great economics in their shale areas and continually out-deliver guidance, justifying the share rally, despite rich trading multiples,” said Oriana Covault, a research analyst at Balanz Capital in Buenos Aires.

The son of a shopkeeper from a farming province, Galuccio trained to be an engineer in Buenos Aires and took jobs early in his career in Argentina’s far-southern oil fields and the US. At 56, he now sits on the board of SLB, the huge oil field-services provider. He founded Vista in 2017.

Whatever happens with Milei’s efforts to implement sweeping reforms, Galuccio said Vista investors should bank on the company meeting its output guidance of 100,000 bbl of oil and gas a day in 2026.

“We will deliver on our 2026 plan,” he said. “Anything else that comes will make us more investable, and it will probably give others opportunities.”

While Vista — which counts a United Arab Emirates government outfit as its biggest shareholder — has helped catalyze growth in Vaca Muerta, YPF remains comfortably the biggest producer. Under new management appointed by Milei, and spurred by pipeline buildouts, the state-run driller is poised to accelerate shale operations.

ExxonMobil bids. Meanwhile, a bidding war that includes Vista is under way to acquire shale oil blocks that Exxon Mobil Corp. once planned to develop.

Exxon is exiting Vaca Muerta as it focuses its efforts elsewhere, including Guyana. It’s an example of how Big Oil has dabbled in, rather than embraced, Argentine shale. The companies have been turned off by government meddling in oil prices and exports — but especially by the money controls that prevent them from freely sending their cash out to other countries.

That’s why Galuccio is so keen to see them gone.

“Easing capital controls will probably be the main single factor enabling Argentina to accelerate development of Vaca Muerta,” Galuccio said.