EricSchleien Posted December 13, 2019 Share Posted December 13, 2019 Hi All - I've started to poke around within the Oil & Gas Sector as pretty much anything commodity related has been beaten down. I remember in 2016, there was lots of bond opportunities in some of these names. Want to start a thread so we can discuss different ideas/opportunities as they come up, and perhaps want some feedback on our ideas. Best, Eric Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BG2008 Posted December 13, 2019 Share Posted December 13, 2019 Antero Midstream Corp - Pays $1.23 per share and trades at $5.85 for a juicy 21% yield. They just gave some concession to Antero Resources. AR is hedged for 2020 and 2021. So no BK till 2022. Should get 9 quarters which amounts to $2.77 which is 47% of your cost. AM is basically the bond in AR. AR bonds trade at 8.4-11% yield. So you pick up 11% more in yield. AM bonds are trading at 7.6 to 8.2% yield. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BG2008 Posted December 13, 2019 Share Posted December 13, 2019 Lots of year end tax loss harvesting. I think AM suffered from this until they recently agreed to reduce fees to AR. I'm probably not a long term holder of this. If Nat Gas prices spike up, you should just get out and take your money. I think we get about 2 years to see a spike in nat gas. In a BK scenario, I think AM's assets are still needed as it is critical infrastructure. I'm a big believer that the only way to own O&G assets is via debt, MLP, or a midstream asset. You can't leave the capital to be re-invested. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benhacker Posted December 14, 2019 Share Posted December 14, 2019 Danbury bonds are interesting to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spekulatius Posted December 14, 2019 Share Posted December 14, 2019 Danbury bonds are interesting to me. I have casually followed distressed debt from the 2015/16 crop of E&P bankruptcies and the recovery rates were mostly awful. Gladly I just looked, but never played in that sandbox. I bought some midstream debt during the 2015 energy credit meltdown and it went very well (OKE debt was paying north of 9% back then and was BB+ rated and never even close to being distressed). There is nothing like this around right now, not even close. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benhacker Posted December 15, 2019 Share Posted December 15, 2019 Yeah, totally agree that recovery are garbage. I would not be buying distressed with hope of recovery in the general case. My bet on Denbury is that they do not file for a variety of reasons, but agree with you point wholeheartedly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lnofeisone Posted December 16, 2019 Share Posted December 16, 2019 Antero Midstream Corp - Pays $1.23 per share and trades at $5.85 for a juicy 21% yield. They just gave some concession to Antero Resources. AR is hedged for 2020 and 2021. So no BK till 2022. Should get 9 quarters which amounts to $2.77 which is 47% of your cost. AM is basically the bond in AR. AR bonds trade at 8.4-11% yield. So you pick up 11% more in yield. AM bonds are trading at 7.6 to 8.2% yield. I've been slowly picking up AM shares for tax harvesting. My secondary thesis for selecting AM is the fact $1.23 distribution doesn't show up in some financial filters (e.g., SeekingAlpha hasn't caught up yet but) and looks like updates will show up come January. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BG2008 Posted December 22, 2019 Share Posted December 22, 2019 AM has worked much better than I could've imagined in the last few days. I bought an initial lot at $7 and then bought a bunch more at $5.25 when they announced the AR/AM deal at a 23% yield. At one point AM traded at a 4-5% yield. Of course, that was a unsustainable price. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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