Fellow Investors, many thanks for the kind words. @bukithot, yes Hibisbcus owns 50% of Sabah PSC, the other 50% is owned by Petronas Carigali.
Hibiscus can be seen as a hedge against depreciating ringgit (emerging markets currencies). To a certain extend, the share price now has an arbitrage against the ringgit. That is, rightly, the share price should have appreciated as in ringgit term, the revenue would have appreciated by 1.29% (The Edge Financial Daily today). Yes, when ringgit appreciate, revenue (in ringgit terms) will be lower.
@Paperplane, yes the production of Hibiscus will go from about 2,800 bpd to 8,300 bpd give and take. North Sabah alone is already about 5,500 bpd. It not only double, almost triple. Of course, there are many production related issues, compressors not working, leaking valves, spurious instruments, etc etc, so production may come in lower than 8,300 bpd. Hibiscus is now (since 31/3/18) running North Sabah, 50% production (of course less cost oil, royalty, etc) therefore accrued to Hibiscus - see table provided in 3rd quarter of Hibiscus and reproduced in this write up.
@VenFx - yes, this is an area I am not able to get a handle on. That is why in my write-up I only concentrated on (actual/predictable) oil production. Any development / exploration (cost) will definitely affect the bottom line.
@paperplane, thank you for your support and kind word. I will wait for the final quarter and then I will review my model, this may take a while as I am also looking at other things.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
Dericlock
1,539 posts
Posted by Dericlock > 2018-07-25 12:22 | Report Abuse
Great article, really in depth analysis to hibiscus and its' potential earning.
Something to highlight is oil from north sabah is traded at a premium price than brent.