Bowleven — Update 6 March 2016

Bowleven — Update 6 March 2016

Bowleven

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Written by

Bowleven

Watch for Intra Isongo

2016 outlook

Oil & gas

7 March 2016

Price

20.75p

Market cap

£67.9m

US$1.4/£

Net cash ($m) at end October 2015

120

Shares in issue

324.3m

Free float

93%

Code

BLVN

Primary exchange

AIM

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

9.2

(15.3)

(34.1)

Rel (local)

4.1

(13.1)

(27.4)

52-week high/low

33.5p

18.2p

Business description

Bowleven (BLVN) is an AIM-listed, Africa-focused E&P with assets in Cameroon, Kenya and Zambia. Its main asset is its 20% net interest in the Etinde development, which will provide gas to a fertiliser plant for 20 years.

Next event

Carried appraisal wells at Etinde (to cap of $40m)

Late 2016/early 2017

Analysts

Will Forbes

+44 (0)20 3077 5749

Elaine Reynolds

+44 (0)20 3077 5713

Ian McLelland

+44 (0)20 3077 5756

Bowleven is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

After the completion of the farm-down to Lukoil/NewAge in 2015, the bulk of Bowleven’s value lies in its 20% interest in the Etinde gas condensate field and significant cash resources. In the current market, these cash resources (with no debt or outstanding work commitments) put it in a strong position as a well-funded developer and mean it has the ability to screen additional inorganic opportunities, as well as take advantage of falling service costs to maximise value. We expect the two carried appraisal wells in the Intra Isongo to be drilled in late 2016/early 2017, with the potential to more than triple the company’s resource base. As the project approaches FID in 2017, we would expect investors to attribute more value to the development but, for now, more than half of our core NAV of 45p/share is made up of cash. Our RENAV of 60p/share includes an uplift from the Intra Isongo and a potential development at Bomono.

Year
end

Revenue
($m)

PBT*
($m)

Operational
cash flow ($m)

Capex
($m)

Net (debt)/
cash ($m)

06/14

0.0

(13.6)

(8.6)

18.0

20.5

06/15

0.0

(14.1)

(10.4)

35.1

144.8

06/16e

0.0

(14.0)

(13.2)

27.5

104.2

06/17e

6.3

(13.2)

(9.1)

51.5

58.8

Note: *PBT is normalised, excluding intangible amortisation, exceptional items and share-based payments.

Etinde FID delayed…

The final investment decision (FID) has taken longer than we expected at Etinde. This is a consequence of the new operator, the complications of the fertiliser plant requiring co-FID and the promise of the appraisal wells on Intra Isongo, which could add enough to the resource base to enable consideration of alternative/additional offtake solutions. For the moment, we continue to assume the fertiliser plant solution (albeit with FID in 2017), which is relatively robust even at lower oil prices.

…which allows a judicious deployment of capital

The current value is dominated by the potential development at Etinde and its cash resources, which is enough (combined with anticipated debt) to fund the development of the fertiliser solution. The delay in reaching Etinde FID means management is free to judiciously deploy some cash in the meantime for positive returns. This includes the short-term acceleration of a gas-to-power development at Bomono and screening of other inorganic growth opportunities.

Valuation: Etinde development dominates

The delay in the Etinde development and uncertainty over the full exploitation plan for the resource causes us to reduce our CoS for the project. This combines with a reduction in our long-term oil assumptions to reduce our core NAV to 45p/share. However, 2016 has the potential to be a key year for value creation for the company as the Intra Isongo wells could potentially more than double resources (our current risked valuation of existing resources is over 20p, so success at Intra Isongo could mean a further step change in value). Our RENAV is 60p/share.

Company description: Appraisal wells could be transformational

In the last year, Bowleven has successfully completed the farm-down of its key asset (Etinde) leaving it with a still material 20% interest and enough cash resources to fully fund its share of development costs with some spare to devote to other business development. The gross 2C contingent resources of 290mmboe are material, which could be further increased with the two (fully-carried) wells which will appraise the promising horizons previously drilled. Drilling these wells has the potential to be material to Bowleven, as success could more than triple the existing resource base.

Since last year, the possibility of unlocking a greater resource (from Intra Isongo) has delayed the development concept for Etinde. We continue to assume development for Etinde to supply gas to an onshore fertiliser plant (to be built by Ferrostaal) on a 20-year contract, but this is now one of four development concepts that could be implemented. Additionally, this has meant a delay and our initial expectations of project timing were too optimistic (we modelled FID in late 2014, but we now expect FID to be in mid-to late 2017). If the appraisal of Etinde proves up more significant resources, we would still model these as flowing to a proposed LNG plant (although we now model first gas in 2022), but exploitation via another LNG project or an onshore power plant are also possible.

Elsewhere in the portfolio, the results of the extended well tests of the Bomono wells support plans to supply around 5-6mmscfd to a small-scale power generation plant, which should link to a sub-station very close to the wells. We model first gas in early 2017 and a 15-year plateau for now but expect further information as plans firm up. Longer term, we model a larger (50MW) gas supply contract, although the eventual size of any project would very much depend on a fuller appreciation of the full resources at Bomono (and could be much larger).

Valuation: 45p, set to grow; Intra Isongo could add meaningfully

The core NAV of 45p/share is dominated by the company’s cash pile and the value of its share of the Etinde development (helped by the carry on two appraisal wells). As the Etinde development progresses and cash balance decreases, we expect the value of the project to grow materially towards first gas. In addition to this, we add risked, DCF-derived values for Etinde Phase 2 and exploration in Bomono to get to a RENAV of 60p/share. Further value could be added by the material appraisal wells planned at Etinde (currently expected to be in 2016) and exploration in Kenya and Zambia. However, until we receive visibility of the well timing and funding within the next 18 months, we exclude them from our RENAV. To give investors an idea of the impact, we currently value (risked) resources at more than 20p, so success at Intra Isongo, which could more than triple the resource base, could add significant value as and when drilled.

Financials: $120m in cash and a partial development carry

In the current investing environment, balance sheet strength is critical for E&Ps. The 31 October 2015 cash on hand of $120m is therefore an enormous asset for Bowleven, which should be enough to cover its share of development costs for Phase 1 with cash to spare for other projects should it choose (assuming it can raise debt for some funding). Under the terms of the farm-down deal, it will receive $15m by September 2016 (or after the appraisal wells are drilled, whichever is earlier) and a further $25m on FID of the project (most likely in 2017 in our view). Before that, development of Bomono is likely to be a low-capex phased gas development.

Sensitivities

We await the appraisal wells at Etinde as a key milestone that could change the profile of development at Etinde. Should the fertiliser development be chosen, we expect the announcement of a gas sales agreement (GSA) as the next step before FID. Given the delays seen thus far on the project, it is understandable that investors are being cautious until FID is taken. Once this happens (which will require parallel decisions for the upstream and fertiliser developments), we believe investors will start to price in the value to a greater extent.

Company description: Cameroonian developer

Bowleven is an AIM-listed E&P that owns interests in two permits in Cameroon. It is currently pursuing development of its Etinde permit, where the company estimates gross 2C P50 contingent resources as 290mmboe. As a liquids-rich gas field, the company aims to supply the gas to a fertiliser plant onshore (to be built by Ferrostaal) on a 20-year contract with the liquids sold on the open market, progressing towards FID in 2017.

The onshore Bomono blocks, NW of Douala, are still in the exploration phase, with Bowleven drilling two exploration wells. We model gross recoverable resources of 45mmboe in each well. Finally, the company has interests in two areas in East Africa. Interest in Block 11B onshore Kenya and exploration acreage in Zambia complete the portfolio.

Etinde

Bowleven holds a 20% interest in the Etinde permit MHLP-7, which contains net contingent P50 resources of 58mmboe (gross contingent resources of 290mmboe). This resource is held entirely within MHLP-7 and represents a material fall from 2014 year-end estimate of 244mmboe due to the completion of the farm-down to Lukoil/NewAge (both 30% WI) and the expiration of the PSC on MHLP-5&6 in December 2014. The block is shallow with maximum water depths of 65m.

The high gas content seen in the discoveries in the region has historically proved an obstacle to the development. Until recently, Cameroon has not had a big enough economy to absorb large volumes of gas, meaning small accumulations have ended up being stranded. The advent of the proposed fertiliser plant solution (one of several possible solutions) means these fields can be consolidated and exploited.

Development options depend on Intra Isongo results

Development options were affected by the strong rates from the IM-5 well, which tested a combined maximum flow rate of over 17.8kboed, exceeding “initial expectations, encountering 95 metres of net pay in the Intra and Middle Isongo reservoir objectives and flowing condensate rich gas at substantial rates on test from both intervals”.

This has led to a re-examination of the potential from the Etinde licence and the promise of much larger volumes within this interval. It is this area that will be further appraised by two wells (probably in 2016) to firm up volumes. We think it was the strength of these tests and the upside potential identified in the Intra Isongo that gave NewAge/Lukoil the impetus to execute the farm-down, despite the fall in oil prices before the completion of the transaction.

Upside of net prospective resources could add >200mmboe in time

Analysis of the data has shown further prospects at the same Intra Isongo interval, while the results of testing at a similar interval at IE-3 tested oil and condensate. Bowleven’s estimates of volumes in place are 1-2tcf (167-333mmboe) at P90 confidence. If we assume a 70% recovery factor for gas this would imply 115-230mmboe. On rough rules of thumb, P50 could be 3x larger than this, equating to 345-690mmboe. Associated liquids will likely add further. We expect wells to be spudded in late 2016/early 2017, but timing remains uncertain, given that Bowleven is no longer the operator and the oil price environment has added material uncertainly. The FID will likely be taken six to nine months after the appraisal wells, so we expect it to be in mid-/late 2017.

Option one – production offtake to fertiliser plant

We continue to model Bowleven based on options one and two at this time, pending any further announcements/developments. We gave full detail of the development of the fertiliser plant in our initiation note, but a quick summary is below.

1.

First gas is planned for 30 months from FID.

2.

The fields will be tied to a CPF onshore, which will strip out gas (to fertiliser plant) and liquids (sold separately).

3.

The IM-5 well was very positive for the company, with cumulative production of over 17.8mboe/d from tests. This confirmed P90 volumes more than sufficient for the fertiliser plant. High well rates also mean relatively fewer wells are needed for the full development.

4.

It is anticipated to lead to production of 600ktpa of ammonia and 700ktpa of urea over at least 20 years. This corresponds to 70mmscf/d to be supplied by Etinde.

Option two – Cameroon LNG (CLNG)

The contingent resources at Etinde permit exceed those required for the fertiliser plant (around 180mmboe will be produced in for the fertiliser plant, leaving 110mmboe in the contingent resource base). Unless the fertiliser plant is significantly upsized, another route for the hydrocarbons is needed to fully exploit the resources. As stated earlier, Cameroon has a number of similarly stranded gas-heavy assets and the consolidation of these is planned by GDF to export via LNG (which could be Cameroon LNG or another LNG project BLNG/FLNG).

FEED and due diligence are still being worked through, but the current plan for CLNG is to have an initial 3.5mtpa train. We model production guided by Bowleven; a 200mmcf/d plateau for around 10 years will give further time for liquids production. This should allow more complete exploitation of the current resource, but we note that wells at Intra Isongo could add meaningfully to the resource.

Exhibit 1: Gas production rates

Exhibit 2: Full development concept

Source: Bowleven

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 1: Gas production rates

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 2: Full development concept

Source: Bowleven


Option three – power

The third option is the supply of a large gas-powered generator for Douala. Cameroon suffers from a lack of electricity (see section on Bomono in later section) and a larger Etinde gas resource could supply a large IPP. This would require a joint venture with a power producer (presumably ENEO), which would be responsible for the downstream electrical plant construction. We would expect the consortium to supply gas at a price to ensure liquids can be sold.

Option four – Golar LNG

The Perenco/Golar FLNG project at Kribi (FID taken in September 2015) is due to start-up in 2017 and the project has spare capacity (a September press release states that it “is anticipated that the allocated reserves will be produced at a rate of 1.2 million tons of LNG per annum, representing approximately 50% of the vessel's nameplate production capacity”). Piping the gas to this project would be relatively straightforward but over quite a distance (over 90km).

Bomono

Bowleven currently holds a 100% net interest in two onshore blocks, NW of Douala (though the government continues to hold a 10% back-in right). Bowleven agreed to farm down 20% to Africa Fortesa, the company that drilled the exploration wells at Bomono, but that arrangement has now lapsed.

The Bomono permit was drilled 16 times in the 1950s, proving an active Upper Cretaceous-sourced hydrocarbon system. The company has acquired 500km of 2D and combined re-processed legacy seismic, which has revealed numerous tertiary structural traps with some Cretaceous stratigraphic leads. Bowleven progressed two prospects, Zingana and Moambe.

Exhibit 3: Bomono wells targeted four sands

Exhibit 4: Moambe and Zingana closures

Source: Bowleven

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 3: Bomono wells targeted four sands

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 4: Moambe and Zingana closures

Source: Bowleven

Two wells were drilled in late 2015 at Moambe and Zingana. Both encountered all prognosed reservoirs and wireline logs were acquired. At Moambe, gas pay was confirmed in the B sand from sample and logs. The wells were completed for production (negating the need to further near-term drilling) with results giving management confidence that an initial gas development of 5-6mmscfd could be supported (the Moambe well reached a maximum sustained rate of 7.3mmscfd, with no signs of reservoir pressure depletion).

Development concept and monetisation

A key concern of ours was the ease of monetisation. The level of industry development in Douala has meant gas demand has typically been the limiting factor in the past. Victoria’s Logbaba supplies the greater Doula area, and we were concerned that a further gas source, in the form of Bomono, would not have much market to sell to. However, we are more optimistic for a number of reasons

stories of power outages abound in Douala, and only 30% of Cameroon’s population have access to electricity;

as Douala develops, its demand for gas will likely increase, as customers get a more reliable, cleaner, cheaper source of energy;

in 2014, a majority stake in Sonel was bought by Actis, a UK-based PE firm (44% is retained by the government) for $220m (since renamed ENEO). Gas pricing is not regulated, allowing fair market prices to be achieved (though electricity pricing is regulated and will have influence);

an existing player points to a further 50-80MW of demand from ENEO over the next five years; and

power developments include a 50MW, $2.2bn solar plant being built by GSC Energy.

Although we are optimistic that a larger market for gas should develop, this will not necessarily be a quick process. Gas-to-power allows the company to take advantage of the existing 'pipeline' of the power network and allows it to deal with one, large, well-resourced client. Ambition to supply direct to power generation therefore makes sense.

Moambe and Zingana are over 20km away from central Douala (population 1.9m) and 40km from the Dibamba power station. The fields are, however, closer to the city of Buea (population 90,000).

In recent months, management has sought to guide the market towards a gas to power solution for any Bomono discovery. Early monetisation will be based on packaged power units (which could be bought or more likely leased), to allow associated liquids to be sold to the local refinery at Limbe. It is likely that small-scale units will be piloted first, with an IPP solution possible once volumes and production rates are firmed up.

The production completion of the wells means that initial commercial production could be started quickly at Bomono, providing it with cash flows in short order. An Exploitation Authorisation Application (EEA) was delivered to the government in December 2015.

Valuation and funding of Bomono

Bowleven currently holds 100% WI of the Bomono permits (although we expect the government to back in for 10% in time) and the low-capex, phased development concept should allow the company to retain a significant portion of this WI for full development. Revenues from initial production could also contribute to the further development costs.

We assume the small-scale gas-to-power will start in 2017 at Bomono, with a 15-year plateau of 5-6mmcfd. This will require relatively little investment and may lead (subject to resources review after the wells) to a larger project, of perhaps 50MW or more.

Kenya and Zambia

Bowleven has a 35% net interest in Block 11B onshore Kenya (14,200km2). The block lies in the NW corner of Kenya, on the border with Ethiopia and South Sudan (and directly north of the Tullow/Africa Oil Lokichar Basin acreage). The company entered the basin by taking a 50% interest in the block from Adamantine in 2012. The company then executed a deal, by which First Oil earned a 30% interest in Bowleven’s share in the block by funding a portion of future expenditure in Kenya, including $9m of the first $10m of BLVN’s obligations under the first exploration phase.

The company completed a full-tensor gravity airborne survey in 2014 and identified five sub-basins. A planned seismic survey was not undertaken due to security and logistical issues in 2015. The first phase of exploration lapsed in May 2015, but the company was granted a one-year extension.

Even with this extension, drilling is clearly some time away and development even further in the future (for example FID on TLW/AOI discoveries are only likely to be taken at the end of 2016, suggesting that first production from any Bowleven discovery is perhaps a decade away). Given this, the stock market is extremely unlikely to give any value at this stage. For illustration only, we have modelled a 200mmbbl field, arriving at a value of under $2/boe. The company has no outstanding work commitments in Kenya.

Exhibit 5: Kenyan acreage close to discoveries

Exhibit 6: Zambia a potential extension of the rift play

Source: Bowleven

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 5: Kenyan acreage close to discoveries

Source: Bowleven

Exhibit 6: Zambia a potential extension of the rift play

Source: Bowleven

Following the opening up of the rift play in Kenya, a wave of interest has flowed to other prospective rift plays and Bowleven management believes that Zambia could hold material potential. To this end, the company has picked 100% interests in three blocks (covering 16,250km2), with approvals for a further two blocks pending. Given the frontier nature of the basin, Bowleven has only a minimum commitment of just $500k. Drilling is some way off; we see this as a longer-term option.

Management

William MacDonald Allan (non-executive chairman) has over 20 years’ experience in senior positions within both the industrial and oil services sectors. Until recently, he was chairman of ASCO, an international oil support services group, having previously held the position of CEO for 8 years. Before joining ASCO he was divisional managing director at Alfred McAlpine.

Kevin Hart (chief executive officer) was finance director at Cairn Energy for over eight years, a role that incorporated board responsibility for financial, commercial, legal, risk management and HR matters. Before this, he was a senior associate director with Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group, specialising in oil and gas sector mergers and acquisitions.

David Clarkson (chief operating officer) previously worked for BP where he held a variety of senior executive positions in the upstream business, including leading major project developments in frontier locations and as technical vice president for projects and engineering.

Kerry Crawford (finance director) joined Bowleven in 2008 as deputy finance director and head of IR. She previously worked at Cairn Energy, latterly in the role as deputy finance director and head of IR. She qualified and first worked as a chartered accountant at Ernst & Young.

Ed Willett (exploration director) has worked in the exploration business for 28 years. He started his career with Carless Exploration in the mid-1980s, working on UK onshore and UK continental shelf assets, before joining Cairn Energy, where he held a variety of technical and management roles across Cairn’s entire portfolio.

John Martin (non-executive director) has more than 30 years’ experience in international banking in the oil & gas industry and until recently was a senior managing director in the oil & gas group at Standard Chartered Bank. He was appointed to Bowleven's board in May 2015.

Philip Tracy (non-executive director) is a chartered engineer with over 40 years of experience in the international oil and gas industry, including 20 years at board level in both publicly listed and private companies. He was appointed as a non-executive director in 2011.

Tim Sullivan (non-executive director) has over 40 years’ experience primarily with Conoco, Getty Oil and Enterprise Oil. Tim co-founded Revus Energy, went on to be deputy CEO of Agora Oil and Gas and is deputy CEO of Origo Exploration. He was appointed to the board in 2009.

Sensitivities

In contrast to many E&Ps in the sector, the main store of value in Bowleven is a development asset, though exploration could add meaningfully over time. Bowleven is exposed to the normal geological/technical risks prevalent in oil/gas. Apart from these, we highlight the following as risks:

Development risks: the main development of Etinde is dependent on the parallel development of the fertiliser plant due to be built, without which a market for the gas is far less certain. The risks therefore encompass the normal development risks of an oil and gas field but include those of construction of the fertiliser plant, which is not in management’s control.

Delays: the project has experienced notable delays over recent years. In the 2012 annual report, FID was expected in H213, which was delayed to mid-2014 in AR2013. In our initiation in mid-2015, we anticipated FID in Q414/Q115. It is currently forecast to be in 2017, three years later than first thought. Given the new operators and possible re-appraisal of the project following the appraisal wells targeting Intra Isongo, this could easily slip further.

Reservoir risk: development will require many wells. While the IM-5 well showed very strong productive capacity, the full development will include some smaller fields.

Oil/gas pricing: the pricing achieved for the gas sold to the fertiliser plant will be governed by the GSA, which will likely provide a good return for both parties. However, much of the revenue (around 75%) will be generated by sales of liquids, the prices of which will float with global benchmarks. We expect LNG gas realisations to be higher than those from the fertiliser plant.

Country risk: there is a chance that instability could affect Bowleven’s assets in Cameroon, but we see this as a small risk at this time. President Paul Biya has held office since 1982.

Counterparty risk: as well as the fertiliser plant, Bowleven is dealing with a number of players in exploring and developing its assets. Its relationship with NewAge is not without issues (given legal action taken in 2014) and could be a risk. However, NewAge and Lukoil are unlikely to have funding issues. Elsewhere, Adamantine Energy (partner in Kenya) is a small private company while First Oil is the largest private UK-owned company producing in the North Sea.

Valuation

Traditionally, we value companies with an asset-by-asset NAV derived from DCF modelling. Our valuation includes production, development and contingent resources, while exploration is valued only if the company has a plan and resources to drill in the next 12-18 months. We apply a risking to this value, to take account of geological, technical and commercial uncertainties.

For pre-FID development assets, we apply a maximum 65% CoS. However, given the delays in reaching FID, and the number of options for development, we have reduced the Etinde CoS to 50%. This does not reflect increased uncertainties over the size or quality of resources, but rather that in our initiation we had anticipated FID in six months; more than a year on, this is more than a year away. There is therefore clearly uncertainty in the development approach.

The oil price movement has perhaps also contributed to this risk. For oil, we have reduced our price assumptions to $70/bbl long term for Brent in real terms (from $80/bbl) after a gradual recovery from current prices ($40/bbl in 2016, $50/bbl in 2017). We assume gas prices realised for the fertiliser plant are well below those for LNG, given fertiliser plant gas is effectively an enabler for the liquids production.

Exhibit 7: NAV summary

Asset

 

 

 

Recoverable reserves

 

 

 

Country

Diluted WI

CoS/risk

Gross

Net

NPV/boe

Net risked value

 

%

%

mmboe

mmboe

$/boe

$m

/share

Net (debt)/cash (Dec 2015e)

100%

100%

111

24

SG&A (NPV of three years)

100%

100%

(35)

(8)

$25m on FID (assumed 2017)

100%

83%

21

4

$15m on appraisal wells (assumed Sept 2016)

100%

95%

14

3

Development

Etinde development

Cameroon

20%

50%

181

36

5.3

96

21

Core NAV

 

 

 

 

 

 

207

45

Potential development

Cameroon LNG extension

Cameroon

20%

20%

109

22

6.7

29

6

Bomono - Moambe small scale gas project

Cameroon

90%

50%

11

10

6.7

33

7

Possible exploration/appraisal in next 18 months

Bomono - ZinganaPowerSupply

Cameroon

90%

24%

27

24

2.4

14

3

Cost of cash shortfall for development

Cameroon

100%

24%

(5)

(1)

Possible exploration NAV

 

 

 

 

 

 

71

15

RENAV

 

 

 

 

 

 

278

60

Upcoming potential exploration/appraisal

Illustrative Intra Isongo value

Cameroon

20%

10%

290

58

2.4

14

3

Source: Edison Investment Research

Given the uncertainty over the development option, especially with possible additional resources at Intra Isongo potentially being de-risked in 2016, it is difficult to give a value for the Intra Isongo wells. Should Intra Isongo be successful, this could unlock a further tripling of net resources. This would therefore be a material event for the shares.

We give an initial estimate of the potential value of Intra Isongo as an illustrative guide for investors. In this scenario, we assume that it increases gross contingent reserves by 100% (or an additional 58mmboe net to BLVN), with a delay in development to account for further investigation/appraisal and FEED work. In reality, we know that potential resources added may (in the upside case) be more than double this estimate. We also note that any development of this greater resource could push the existing financing resources of BLVN, meaning that external capital will have to be raised. Following our oil principles, we therefore apply a 50% funding risk element to account for this (on top of GCoS of 20%). We caveat that these estimates are very much initial thoughts and are subject to revision as/when the Intra Isongo is drilled/proven up.

Sensitivities

Even though the development of Etinde revolves around its ability to sell gas, the majority of its value comes from selling the associated liquids (although the low oil price means it makes up a lower percentage than we had previously anticipated). Therefore, while the gas prices achieved at the fertiliser plant are important, the upcoming GSA is critical to enable the project to go ahead, rather than for headline prices.

Oil prices are more critical; we calculate that a change in long-term oil prices from $70/bbl (of +/-$20/bbl) would see a movement of unrisked Etinde NPV of c 30% However, we caution that this is not the dynamic sensitivity that would happen in reality. If oil prices remain depressed, we would expect to see a fall in costs, partially offsetting the decrease in headline prices. We note that the value of the shares would be far less sensitive given its cash resources. We also note that the contribution from a long-term fixed price gas contract (to which we imagine any of the development options would lead) means that the project economics are far more robust for the partners.

Financials

Following the completion of the farm-out of Etinde, Bowleven received $165m in March 2015. This was followed by c $5m (working capital adjustment) to make up the full $170m as defined under the terms of the deal. Bowleven will also benefit from a carry of up to $40m carry for two Etinde appraisal wells (including testing) – given the fall in costs in recent months, we would expect this $40m to more than fully carry the wells. Additionally, Bowleven will receive $15m on completion of appraisal drilling (or September 2016, whichever is earlier) and $25m on Etinde FID (expected in 2017).

These movements mean that at October 2015, Bowleven held $120m in cash and no debt. Bowleven reported a loss of $90m for the 12 months ended 30 June 2015. This includes a $76m impairment charge, which was a result of the revised commodity price and planning assumptions for the development. The group’s current G&A charge is estimated be around $1.1m per month, ($1.5m previously). Further cost-saving initiatives are being implemented to reduce G&A costs. We forecast a December 2015 cash figure of $111m (with no debt).

Cash flows and funding for the projects

We assume G&A of $14m pa (more than the company guides for conservatism), and capex in FY15-16 of $28m; this will leave Bowleven with outstanding cash of $104m in June 2016. We assume the appraisal well bonus of $15m is delivered in September 2016 and FID is taken in H217 (calendar), adding a further $25m.

In our initiation, we stated Bowleven would be well-funded for the Etinde fertiliser development as we modelled it. We explicitly assume that the company will be able to raise debt based on the long-term nature of the sales to the fertiliser plant. Bowleven’s estimate of pre-production capex for Etinde (of c $140m, as modelled), means that Bowleven will have to source external capital for the project, but we believe the long-term nature of the gas sales agreement at the fertiliser plant should allow room for debt to be raised, which should be able to fund any shortfall in the company’s cash position. We note, however, that costs have fallen very materially in the last 18 months, and a full development should be able to benefit from these reductions.

The course of the Bomono development is still not clear, and while we expect a small, low-cost, initial development, the company still needs to interpret the full results of the drilling for any larger follow-on phase. If the small power generation project comes to fruition, it should provide the company with useful cashflows it can recycle for larger developments in Cameroon.

Exhibit 8: Financial summary

US$000s

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end June

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

Revenue

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

0

6,314

Cost of Sales

0

0

0

0

0

0

(2,190)

Gross Profit

0

0

0

0

0

0

4,124

EBITDA

 

 

(54,460)

(15,705)

(10,592)

(11,604)

(11,471)

(14,200)

(10,076)

Operating Profit (before GW and except.)

 

 

(54,922)

(16,205)

(11,088)

(12,025)

(11,868)

(14,200)

(13,344)

Exceptionals

0

0

0

0

(75,959)

0

15,000

Goodwill and intangible amortisation

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

(54,922)

(16,205)

(11,088)

(12,025)

(87,827)

(14,200)

1,656

Net foreign exchange gain/(loss)

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Net Interest

(21,894)

3,132

7

(1,577)

(2,192)

167

154

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

(76,816)

(13,073)

(11,081)

(13,602)

(14,060)

(14,033)

(13,190)

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

 

(76,816)

(13,073)

(11,081)

(13,602)

(90,019)

(14,033)

1,810

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Profit After Tax (norm)

(76,816)

(13,073)

(11,081)

(13,602)

(14,060)

(14,033)

(13,190)

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

(76,816)

(13,073)

(11,081)

(13,602)

(90,019)

(14,033)

1,810

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

216

295

295

324.3

324.3

324.3

324.3

EPS - normalised (c)

 

 

(35.6)

(4.4)

(3.8)

(4.2)

(4.3)

(4.3)

(4.1)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EPS - FRS 3 (c)

 

 

(35.6)

(4.4)

(3.8)

(4.2)

(27.8)

(4.3)

0.6

Dividend per share (c)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Gross Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

65%

EBITDA Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

-160%

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

-211%

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

383,063

426,665

533,437

551,446

306,558

334,058

382,291

Intangible Assets

340,637

425,414

532,507

550,745

304,662

318,412

325,445

Tangible Assets

802

1,251

930

701

1,896

15,646

56,846

Investments

41,624

0

0

0

0

0

0

Current Assets

 

 

0

0

52,150

42,351

212,029

171,496

126,073

Stocks

0

0

11,023

10,404

5,370

5,370

5,370

Debtors

0

0

16,385

6,493

6,431

6,431

6,431

Cash

0

0

19,742

20,454

144,751

104,218

58,795

Other receivables

0

0

5,000

5,000

55,477

55,477

55,477

Current Liabilities

 

 

(39,261)

(8,575)

(15,568)

(6,274)

(12,695)

(12,695)

(12,695)

Creditors

(39,261)

(8,575)

(15,568)

(6,274)

(12,695)

(12,695)

(12,695)

Short term borrowings

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Long term borrowings

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Other long term liabilities

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Net Assets

 

 

343,802

418,090

570,019

587,523

505,892

492,859

495,669

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

(11,808)

(16,433)

(8,404)

(8,576)

(10,438)

(13,200)

(9,076)

Net Interest

732

821

556

177

139

167

154

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Capex

(85,706)

(58,721)

(114,381)

(18,037)

(35,141)

(27,500)

(51,500)

Acquisitions/disposals

0

0

0

0

160,688

0

0

Financing

112,792

122,905

76

20,924

71

0

0

Other

0

(2,672)

0

4,482

9,016

0

15,000

Net Cash Flow

16,010

45,900

(122,153)

(1,030)

124,335

(40,533)

(45,422)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

(79,152)

(96,621)

(142,481)

(19,742)

(20,454)

(144,751)

(104,218)

Effect of FX changes

1,511

(92)

(586)

1,742

(38)

0

0

Other

(52)

52

0

0

0

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

(96,621)

(142,481)

(19,742)

(20,454)

(144,751)

(104,218)

(58,795)

Source: Edison Investment Research, Bloomberg

Contact details

Revenue by geography

Bowleven
The Cube, 45 Leith Street
Edinburgh
EH1 3AT
+44 131 524 5678
www.bowleven.com

N/A

Contact details

Bowleven
The Cube, 45 Leith Street
Edinburgh
EH1 3AT
+44 131 524 5678
www.bowleven.com

Revenue by geography

N/A

Management team

Chairman: William Allan

Chief executive officer: Kevin Hart

William Allan has over 20 years’ experience in senior positions within the industrial and oil services sectors. Until recently William was chairman of ASCO, an international oil support service group, having previously held the position of CEO. Before this he was divisional managing director at Alfred McAlpine. He was appointed non-executive chairman in December 2015.

Kevin Hart was finance director at Cairn Energy for over eight years, a role that incorporated board responsibility for financial, commercial, legal, risk management and HR matters. Prior to this, he was a senior associate director with Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group, specialising in oil and gas sector mergers and acquisitions.

Chief operating officer : David Clarkson

Finance director: Kerry Crawford

David Clarkson was appointed to the Bowleven board in 2013. He previously worked for BP where he held a variety of senior executive positions in the upstream business, including leading major project developments in frontier locations and as technical vice president for projects & engineering. David has a degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Strathclyde and is a chartered engineer and fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

Kerry Crawford joined Bowleven in 2008 as deputy finance director and head of IR. She previously worked at Cairn Energy for 10 years, latterly in the role as deputy finance director and head of IR. She qualified and first worked as a chartered accountant at Ernst & Young and is a member of The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland. She is also an associate member of the Institute of Corporate Treasurers.

Management team

Chairman: William Allan

William Allan has over 20 years’ experience in senior positions within the industrial and oil services sectors. Until recently William was chairman of ASCO, an international oil support service group, having previously held the position of CEO. Before this he was divisional managing director at Alfred McAlpine. He was appointed non-executive chairman in December 2015.

Chief executive officer: Kevin Hart

Kevin Hart was finance director at Cairn Energy for over eight years, a role that incorporated board responsibility for financial, commercial, legal, risk management and HR matters. Prior to this, he was a senior associate director with Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group, specialising in oil and gas sector mergers and acquisitions.

Chief operating officer : David Clarkson

David Clarkson was appointed to the Bowleven board in 2013. He previously worked for BP where he held a variety of senior executive positions in the upstream business, including leading major project developments in frontier locations and as technical vice president for projects & engineering. David has a degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Strathclyde and is a chartered engineer and fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

Finance director: Kerry Crawford

Kerry Crawford joined Bowleven in 2008 as deputy finance director and head of IR. She previously worked at Cairn Energy for 10 years, latterly in the role as deputy finance director and head of IR. She qualified and first worked as a chartered accountant at Ernst & Young and is a member of The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland. She is also an associate member of the Institute of Corporate Treasurers.

Principal shareholders

(%)

JP Morgan

10.1

Artemis

8.1

Barclays

7.9

TD Waterhouse

7.1

Suttie, I

6.9

Companies named in this report

Gas de France, Cairn, Lukoil, NewAge

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Athersys — Update 3 March 2016

Athersys

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