April 23, 2024

Kinder Morgan’s Big Bet on Drilling Boom

Then there is Richard D. Kinder, chief executive of Kinder Morgan, who has personally made billions of dollars operating the industry’s equivalent of a toll road: pipelines.

Now, with Kinder Morgan’s $21 billion deal to buy a leading rival, the El Paso Corporation, he is doubling down.

Hydraulic fracturing techniques — despite causing a growing controversy — are creating a once-in-a-generation boom in oil and gas drilling in the United States, and the opportunity to build many more pipelines to carry new supplies to market.

Public concerns about the environmental risks posed by hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, raise the possibility of tough new restrictions, higher costs and even outright bans on new wells in some areas. But companies like Kinder Morgan and its competitors think the need for new energy sources means pipelines are a relatively low-risk way to play the boom.

If they are right, Kinder Morgan will collect new tolls for decades, along with the ones it is already pocketing.

The nation’s 450,000 miles of transport pipelines provide a steady flow of profits, and big players like Kinder Morgan are geographically diversified, diluting the impact of a drilling slowdown in any one region. Transmission rates are set by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and do not vary with fluctuating oil and gas prices. A special federal tax break unavailable to most industries bolsters investors’ returns. And before a single mile of a new pipeline is built, the operator typically lines up contracts with oil and gas companies that commit them to use it, guaranteeing revenue in advance.

Fed by such advantages, Kinder Morgan’s pipeline partnership yielded investors a 17.7 percent compound annual return from 2007 to 2010, compared with 3.5 percent for an index of large integrated oil companies, says IHS Herold, a consulting firm.

“Kinder has made a low-return, humdrum business into a river of money,” said Robin West, chief executive of the consulting firm PFC Energy. “The North American energy scene is being transformed, and this company reflects the colossal scale of the emerging industry.”

Kinder Morgan’s proposed purchase of El Paso, announced in October, is so big that it faces months of antitrust scrutiny. The deal would create the largest pipeline owner in the country, with 80,000 miles of pipelines crossing 35 states and linking new oil and gas fields from Texas to Pennsylvania to most major markets. Although regulators would still set transport prices, the company would have more power to direct what flows through its pipes and where.

“By restricting supplies or not expanding pipelines in the future, they are potentially going to keep natural gas from going to consumer markets where gas is needed, and that could impact prices indirectly,” said Ed Hirs, an economist at the University of Houston.

Analysts say antitrust regulators may require Kinder to divest itself of some pipelines, particularly in and around Colorado, though most expect the deal to be approved eventually.

Mr. Kinder and other Kinder officials declined interview requests. But Larry S. Pierce, a company vice president, denied in an e-mail that his company would restrict gas flows. “Pipelines make money by providing transportation service, not by deciding where the gas goes,” he said.

The increased scale would certainly put Kinder Morgan in a prime position to benefit from a coming wave of pipeline construction. Thousands of miles of new pipelines will be needed to serve wells in fast-growing shale fields like the Bakken in North Dakota, the Eagle Ford in south Texas and the Niobrara in Colorado. In some states, pipeline capacity is so scarce that much of the natural gas coming from wells is simply burned as waste.

All told, spending on new pipelines in the United States could reach more than $200 billion by 2035 (in 2010 dollars), according to the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America Foundation.

“Rich Kinder likes to identify tsunamis,” said Yves Siegel, a senior energy analyst at Credit Suisse, “and this is a tsunami that he believes in.”

If the El Paso deal was approved, analysts say, other big pipeline companies, like Williams Partners and Oneok, would need to scramble to keep up with the supersize Kinder Morgan, which would have easier access to capital and a far larger cash stream to buy or build the new networks.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=e403b3d9687d9ff36e3355138f5ab181

Higher Energy Costs Push Up Producer Prices

WASHINGTON (AP) — More expensive gas, cars and furniture pushed wholesale prices higher last month.

The Labor Department said Thursday that its Producer Price Index, which measures price changes before they reach the consumer, rose 0.7 percent in March. That was down from a 1.6 percent rise in February. The index has increased 5.8 percent in the last year.

Excluding food and energy, the core index rose 0.3 percent in March — the second highest increase in the last year.

The price of new cars rose by the most in nearly two years, while the cost of some types of furniture jumped 6.5 percent. Still, core prices are only up 1.9 percent over the last year, a relatively tame rate of inflation.

Higher energy prices accounted for nearly all of the March increase. Gas prices jumped 5.7 percent in March. Food prices dipped last month, after soaring by the most in 36 years in February because of a harsh winter freeze that raised the cost of fresh vegetables. Egg prices dropped 20 percent.

Economists say rising oil and gas prices could slow the economy, leaving consumers with less money to spend on other goods. But average hourly pay has only risen 1.7 percent in the last year, a fact that is likely to keep inflation from spreading.

Employers have little incentive to raise pay when the unemployment rate is high. But businesses are also unlikely to raise prices by much if they sense people cannot afford to pay the added costs.

The government also reported Thursday that more people applied for unemployment benefits last week, the first increase in three weeks. Still, the broader trend points to a slowly healing jobs market.

Applications for unemployment benefits rose 27,000 to a seasonally adjusted 412,000 for the week that ended April 9. That left applications at their highest point since mid-February.

Applications near 375,000 are consistent with a sustained increase in hiring. Applications peaked during the recession at 659,000.

The four-week average of applications, a less volatile measure, rose to 395,750. Applications have dropped by about 6 percent over the last two months.

Companies added more than 200,000 jobs in March for a second month, the first time that has happened since 2006. The unemployment rate fell to a two-year low of 8.8 percent and has dropped a full percentage point since November.

However, a more sobering reason for the drop is that the number of people who are either working or seeking a job is surprisingly low for this stage of the recovery. People without jobs who are not looking for one are not counted as unemployed.

The number of people collecting benefits fell to 3.68 million during the week ended April 2, one week behind the applications data. That was the lowest total since late September 2008.

That does not include millions of people receiving aid under the emergency unemployment benefits programs put in place during the recession.

Overall, 8.5 million people received unemployment benefits in the week ending March 26, the latest data available. That was down slightly from the previous week.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=35bf61ce967a22bf2755dd7433036b19