From FT Alphaville, a snippet :
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2011/06/08/588292/markets-live/
NH talking of the Falklands
NH the sector watcher saw yesterday
NH and boy was he impressed
BE Go on.
NH .....................We had a very upbeat sales-desk lunch yesterday with Sam Moody (CEO) and Peter Dixon-Clarke (FD) of RKH, convincing me even more that this is a core holding in any E&P portfolio. Recent appraisal well results on the Sea Lion oilfield in the North Falklands basin have been extremely encouraging, with the group now assuming a P90 reserves case of 155m barrels recoverable. As recently as last week the group announced that the 14/10-5 well, admittedly a very low-risk 600 metre stepout, had encountered 79m of net pay in the main upper fan and 14m of pay in the lower.
The upper result was around 10% better than the group had prognosed, i.e. a very encouraging result. This well is now being prepared for a testing programme, with results expected by the end of the month. The group is using Electrical Submersible Pumps (ESP) to aid the flow rate, and Id bet that Sams target of 4,000 b/d will easily be met as a result. Anything less than this would be disappointing. Following the 14/10-5 well, around mid-July the group will drill a 4 km stepout to the west called 14/10-6 which will address the mid-case reserves, although the company would not be drawn on what this means my guess would be back up towards the 242m barrels they originally carried for the field. Thereafter the group plans to drill two wells to the south, both targeting the low-case reserves the location of these should be helped by the fast-tracking of a 3D seismic survey just completed
Following these wells, which should take until Q4, it is likely the group will undertake a second CPR for release in Q1 next year. The group is well-financed for at least the next 12 months with $300m of cash. Our current NAV of 593p/share is based on P50 reserves of 170m barrels. Clearly this could end up on the light side if any of the 14/10-6 or the two wells to the south are successful. At 242m barrels our NAV is c800p/share vs a current price of 277p/share. The Falkland stocks have taken a beating in recent months, partially because of the endless stream of dry holes that Desire Petroleum drilled, and partially because of the largely negative sentiment against the E&P sector. The way I see it, RKH now has a very clear roadmap to commercialisng the Sea Lion discovery, and I can easily see scope for a doubling in the share price before year-end......................