1 / 34

. Investment in Information in Petroleum: Real Options and Revelation

By: Marco Antonio Guimarães Dias - Internal Consultant by Petrobras, Brazil - Doctoral Candidate by PUC-Rio Visit the first real options website: www.puc-rio.br/marco.ind/. . Investment in Information in Petroleum: Real Options and Revelation

calida
Download Presentation

. Investment in Information in Petroleum: Real Options and Revelation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. By: Marco Antonio Guimarães Dias- Internal Consultant by Petrobras, Brazil- Doctoral Candidate by PUC-Rio Visit the first real options website:www.puc-rio.br/marco.ind/ .Investment in Information in Petroleum: Real Options and Revelation 6th Annual International Conference on Real Options -Theory Meets Practice July 4-6, 2002 - Coral Beach, Cyprus

  2. E&P Process As Real Options Oil/Gas Success Probability = p • Drill the wildcat (pioneer)? Wait and See? • Technical uncertainty model is required Expected Volume of Reserves = B Revised Volume = B’ • Appraisal phase: delineation of reserves • Invest in additional information? • Delineated but undeveloped reserves • Develop? “Wait and See” for better conditions? • Developed reserves • Not included: Options to expand the production, stop temporally, and abandon

  3. Motivation and Investment in Information Revealed Scenarios Investment inInformation E[V|good news] E[V|neutral news] Expected Value of Project (before the information) E[V] E[V|bad news] • Motivation: Answer questions related to a discovered and delineated oilfield, but with remaining technical uncertainties about the reserve size and quality • Is better to invest in information, to develop, or to wait? • What is the best alternative to invest in information? • What are the properties of the distribution of scenarios revealed after the new information (revelation distribution)?

  4. Technical Uncertainty Modeling: Revelation • How to model the technical uncertainty and its evolution after one or more investment in information? • Investments in information permit both a reduction of the technical uncertainty and a revision of our expectations. • Firms use the new expectation to calculate the NPV or the real options exercise payoff. This new expectation is conditional to information. • When we are evaluating the investment in information, the conditional expectation of the parameter X is itself a random variable E[X | I] • The process of accumulating data about a technical parameter is a learning process towards the “truth” about this parameter • This suggest the names information revelation and revelation distribution • Don’t confound with the “revelation principle” in Bayesian games that addresses the truth on a type of player. Here is truth on a parameter value • The distribution of conditional expectations E[X | I] is named here revelation distribution, that is, the distribution of RX = E[X | I]

  5. Conditional Expectations and Revelation • The concept of conditional expectation is also theoretically sound • We want to estimate X by observing I, using a function g( I ). • The most frequent measure of quality of a predictor g is its mean square error defined by MSE(g) = E[X - g( I )]2 . The choice of g* that minimizes the error measure MSE(g) is exactly the conditional expectation E[X | I ]. • This is a very known property used in econometrics (optimal predictor) • Full revelation definition: when new information reveal all thetruth about the technical parameter, we have full revelation • Much more common is the partial revelation case, but full revelation is important as the limit goal for any investment in information process • In general we need consider alternatives of investment in information: • With different costs to gather and process the information; • With different time to learn (time to gather and process the information); and • With different revelation powers (related with the % of reduction of variance) • In order to both estimate the value of information and to compare alternatives with different revelation powers, we need the nice properties of the revelation distribution (propositions)

  6. The Revelation Distribution Properties • The revelation distributions RX (or distributions of conditional expectations with the new information) have at least 4 nice properties for the real options practitioner: • Proposition 1: for the full revelation case, the distribution of revelation RX is equal to the unconditional (prior) distribution of X • Proposition 2: The expected value for the revelation distribution is equal the expected value of the original (a priori) technical parameter X distribution • E[E[X | I ]] = E[RX] = E[X] (known as law of iterated expectations) • Proposition 3: the variance of the revelation distribution is equal to the expected reduction of variance induced by the new information • Var[E[X | I ]] = Var[RX] = Var[X] - E[Var[X | I ]] = Expected Variance Reduction • Proposition 4: In a sequential investment in information process, the the sequence {RX,1, RX,2, RX,3, …} is an event-driven martingale • In short, ex-ante these random variables have the same mean

  7. Investment in Information & Revelation Propositions Area B: possible 50% chances of BB = 100 MM bbl & 50% of nothing A B Area A: proved BA = 100 MM bbl C D Area D: possible 50% chances of BD = 100 MM bbl & 50% of nothing Area C: possible 50% chances of BC = 100 MM bbl & 50% of nothing • Suppose the following stylized case of investment in information in order to get intuition on the propositions • Only one well was drilled, proving 100 MM bbl (MM = million) • Suppose there are three alternatives of investment in information (with different revelation powers): (1) drill one well (area B); (2) drill two wells (areas B + C); (3) drill three wells (B + C + D)

  8. Alternative 0 and the Total Technical Uncertainty • Alternative Zero: Not invest in information • This case there is only a single scenario, the current expectation • So, we run economics with the expected value for the reserve B: E(B) = 100 + (0.5 x 100) + (0.5 x 100) + (0.5 x 100) E(B) = 250 MM bbl • But the true value of B can be as low as 100 and as higher as 400 MM bbl. Hence, the total uncertainty is large. • Without learning, after the development you find one of the values: • 100 MM bbl with 12.5 % chances (= 0.5 3 ) • 200 MM bbl with 37,5 % chances (= 3 x 0.5 3 ) • 300 MM bbl with 37,5 % chances • 400 MM bbl with 12,5 % chances • The variance of this prior distribution is 7500 (million bbl)2

  9. Alternative 1: Invest in Information with Only One Well • Suppose that we drill only the well in the area B. • This case generated 2 scenarios, because the well B result can be either dry (50% chances) or success proving more 100 MM bbl • In case of positive revelation (50% chances) the expected value is: E1[B|A1] = 100 + 100 + (0.5 x 100) + (0.5 x 100) = 300 MM bbl • In case of negative revelation (50% chances) the expected value is: E2[B|A1] = 100 + 0 + (0.5 x 100) + (0.5 x 100) = 200 MM bbl • Note that with the alternative 1 is impossible to reach extreme scenarios like 100 MM bbl or 400 MM bbl (its revelation power is not sufficient) • So, the expected value of the revelation distribution is: • EA1[RB] = 50% x E1(B|A1) + 50% x E2(B|A1) = 250 million bbl = E[B] • As expected by Proposition 2 • And the variance of the revealed scenarios is: • VarA1[RB] = 50% x (300 - 250)2 + 50% x (200 - 250)2 = 2500 (MM bbl)2 • Let us check if the Proposition 3 was satisfied

  10. Alternative 1: Invest in Information with Only One Well • In order to check the Proposition 3, we need to calculated the expected reduction of variance with the alternative A1 • The prior variance was calculated before (7500). • The posterior variance has two cases for the well B outcome: • In case ofsuccess in B, the residual uncertainty in this scenario is: • 200 MM bbl with 25 % chances (in case of no oil in C and D) • 300 MM bbl with 50 % chances (in case of oil in C or D) • 400 MM bbl with 25 % chances (in case of oil in C and D) • The negative revelation case is analog: can occur 100 MM bbl (25% chances); 200 MM bbl (50%); and 300 MM bbl (25%) • The residual variance in both scenarios are 5000 (MM bbl)2 • So, the expected variance of posterior distribution is also 5000 • So, the expected reduction of uncertainty with the alternative A1 is: 7500 – 5000 = 2500 (MM bbl)2 • Equal variance of revelation distribution(!), as expected by Proposition 3

  11. Visualization of Revealed Scenarios: Revelation Distribution This is exactly the prior distribution of B (Prop. 1 OK!) All the revelation distributions have the same mean (maringale): Prop. 4 OK!

  12. Posterior Distribution x Revelation Distribution Why learn? Reduction of technical uncertainty  Increase thevariance ofrevelationdistribution (and so the option value) • Higher volatility, higher option value. Why invest to reduce uncertainty?

  13. Revelation Distribution and the Experts • The propositions allow a practical way to ask the technical expert on the revelation power of any specific investment in information. It is necessary to ask him/her only 2 questions: • What is the total uncertainty of each relevant technical parameter? That is, the prior probability distribution parameters • By proposition 1, the variance of total initial uncertainty is the variance limit for the revelation distribution generated from any investment in information • By proposition 2, the revelation distribution from any investment in information has the same mean of the total technical uncertainty. • For each alternative of investment in information, what is the expected reduction of variance on each technical parameter? • By proposition 3, this is also the variance of the revelation distribution

  14. Oilfield Development Option and the NPV Equation • Let us see an example. When development option is exercised, the payoff is the net present value (NPV) given by: NPV = V - D = q P B - D • q = economic quality of the reserve, which has technical uncertainty (modeled with the revelation distribution); • P(t) is the oil price ($/bbl) source of the market uncertainty, modeled with the risk neutral Geometric Brownian motion; • B = reserve size (million barrels), which has technical uncertainty; • D = oilfield development cost, function of the reserve size B and possibly following also a correlated geometric Brownian motion, through a stochastic factor u(t) with u(t = 0) = 1, given by: • D(B, t) = u(t). [Fixed Cost + Variable Cost x B]  D = u.[ FC + VC . B] • So, the development exercise price D changes after the information revelation on the reserve size B, and also evolves along the time

  15. NPV x P Chart and the Quality of Reserve Linear Equation for the NPV: NPV = q P B - D NPV (million $) NPV in function of P tangent q = q . B P ($/bbl) - D The quality of reserve (q) is relatedwith the inclination of the NPV line

  16. Real x Risk-Neutral Simulation • The GBM simulation paths: real drift = a, and the risk-neutraldrift = r - d = a - p . We use the risk-neutral measure, which suppresses a risk-premium p from the real drift in the simulation.

  17. Dynamic Value of Information • Value of Information has been studied by decision analysis theory. I extend this view with real options tools • I call dynamic value of information. Why dynamic? • Because the model takes into account the factor time: • Time to expiration for the rights to commit the development plan; • Time to learn: the learning process takes time to gather and process data, revealing new expectations on technical parameters; and • Continuous-time process for the market uncertainties (oil prices) interacting with the current expectations on technical parameters • When analysing a set of alternatives of investment in information, are considered also the learning cost and the revelation power for each alternative • The revelation power is the capacity to reduce the variance of technical uncertainty (= variance of revelation distribution by the Proposition 3)

  18. Best Alternative of Investment in Information • Where EQ is the expectation under risk-neutral measure, which is evaluated with Monte Carlo simulation, and t* is the stopping time (optimal exercise timing). For the path i: • Given the set k = 0, 1, 2… of alternatives (k = 0 means not invest in information) the best k* is the one that maximizes Wk • Where Wk is the value of real option included the cost/benefit from the investment in information with the alternative k (learning cost Ck, time to learn tk), given by:

  19. Normalized Threshold and Valuation • We will perform the valuation considering the optimal exercise at the normalized threshold level (V/D)* • After each Monte Carlo simulation combining the revelation distributions of q and B with the risk-neutral simulation of P (and D) • We calculate V = q P B and D(B), so V/D, and compare it with (V/D)* • Advantage: (V/D)* is homogeneous of degree 0 in V and D. • This means that the rule (V/D)* remains valid for any V and D • So, for any revealed scenario of B, changing D, the rule (V/D)* remains • This was proved only for geometric Brownian motions • (V/D)*(t) changes only if the risk-neutral stochastic process parametersr, d, s change. But these factors don’t change at Monte Carlo simulation • The computational time of using (V/D)* is much lower than V* • The vector (V/D)*(t) is calculated only once, whereas V*(t) needs be re-calculated every iteration in the Monte Carlo simulation.

  20. Combination of Uncertainties in Real Options A B Present Value (t = 0) F(t = 2) = 0 Option F(t = 1) = V - D F(t = 0) = = F(t=1) * exp (- r*t) ExpiredWorthless • The simulated sample paths are checked with the threshold (V/D)* Vt/Dt = (q Pt B)/Dt

  21. Conclusions • The paper main contribution is to help fill the gap in the real options literature on technical uncertainty modeling • Revelation distribution (distribution of conditional expectations) and its 4 propositions, have sound theoretical and practical basis • The propositions allow a practical way to select the best alternative of investment in information from a set of alternatives with different revelation powers • We need ask the experts only: (1) the total technical uncertainty (prior distribution); and (2) for each alternative of investment in information the expected reduction of variance • We saw a dynamic model of value of information combining technical with market uncertainties • Used a Monte Carlo simulation combining the risk-neutral simulation for market uncertainties with the jumps at the revelation time (jump-size drawn from the revelation distributions)

  22. Anexos APPENDIX SUPPORT SLIDES • See more on real options in the first website on real options at: http://www.puc-rio.br/marco.ind/

  23. Technical Uncertainty and Risk Reduction HigherRisk Lower Risk ExpectedValue ExpectedValue confidence interval Lack of Knowledge Trunk of Cone Project evaluation with additionalinformation(t = T) Risk reduction by the investment in information of all firms in the basin (driver is the investment, not the passage of time directly) Current project evaluation (t=0) • Technical uncertainty decreases when efficient investments in information are performed (learning process). • Suppose a new basin with large geological uncertainty. It is reduced by the exploratory investment of the whole industry • The “cone of uncertainty” (Amram & Kulatilaka) can be adapted to understand the technical uncertainty:

  24. Technical Uncertainty and Revelation t = T Value withgood revelation Value withneutral revelation E[V] Value withbad revelation Investment in Information Project valueafter investment Current project evaluation (t=0) • But in addition to the risk reduction process, there is another important issue: revision of expectations (revelation process) • The expected value after the investment in information (conditional expectation) can be very different of the initial estimative • Investments in information can reveal good or bad news

  25. Geometric Brownian Motion Simulation Pt+1 = Pt exp{ (a - 0.5 s2) Dt + s N(0, 1) } Pt+1 = Pt exp{ (r - d - 0.5 s2) Dt + s N(0, 1) } • The real simulation of a GBM uses the real drift a. The price P at future time (t + 1), given the current value Pt is given by: • But for a derivative F(P) like the real option to develop an oilfiled, we need the risk-neutral simulation (assume the market is complete) • The risk-neutral simulation of a GBM uses the risk-neutral drift a’ = r - d. Why? Because by supressing a risk-premium from the real drift a we get r - d. Proof: • Total return r = r + p (where p is the risk-premium, given by CAPM) • But total return is also capital gain rate plus dividend yield: r = a + d • Hence, a + d = r + p a -p = r -d • So, we use the risk-neutral equation below to simulate P

  26. Oil Price Process x Revelation Process P Inv E[B] Inv • What are the differences between these two types of uncertainties? • Oil price (and other market uncertainties) evolves continually along the time and it is non-controllable by oil companies (non-OPEC) • Revelation distributions occur as result of events (investment in information) in discrete points along the time • For exploration of new basins sometimes the revelation of information from other firms can be relevant (free-rider), but it also occurs in discrete-time • In many cases (appraisal phase) only our investment in information is relevant and it is totally controllable by us (activated by management) • In short, every day the oil prices changes, but our expectation about the reserve size will change only when an investment in information is performed  so the expectation can remain the same for months!

  27. Non-Optimized System and Penalty Factor • If the reserve is larger (and/or more productive) than expected, with the limited process plant capacity the reserves will be produced slowly than in case of full information. • This factor can be estimated by running a reservoir simulation with limited process capacity and calculating the present value of V. The NPV with technical uncertainty is calculated using Monte Carlo simulation and the equations: NPV = q P B - D(B) if q B = E[q B] NPV = q P B gup- D(B) if q B > E[q B] NPV = q P B gdown- D(B) if q B < E[q B] In general we have gdown = 1 and gup < 1

  28. Economic Quality of the Developed Reserve • Imagine that you want to buy 100 million barrels of developed oil reserves. Suppose a long run oil price is 20 US$/bbl. • How much you shall pay for the barrel of developed reserve? • One reserve in the same country, water depth, oil quality, OPEX, etc., is more valuable than other if is possible to extract faster (higher productivity index, higher quantity of wells) • A reserve located in a country with lower fiscal charge and lower risk, is more valuable (eg., USA x Angola) • As higher is the percentual value for the reserve barrel in relation to the barrel oil price (on the surface), higher is the economic quality: value of one barrel of reserve = v = q . P • Where q = economic quality of the developed reserve • The value of the developed reserve is v times the reserve size (B)

  29. Overall x Phased Development • Consider two oilfield development alternatives: • Overall development has higher NPV due to the gain of scale • Phased development has higher capacity to use the information along the time, but lower NPV • With the information revelation from Phase 1, we can optimize the project for the Phase 2 • In addition, depending of the oil price scenario and other market and technical conditions, we can not exercise the Phase 2 option • The oil prices can change the decision for Phased development, but not for the Overall development alternative The valuation is similar to the previously presented Only by running the simulations is possible to compare the higher NPV versus higher flexibility

  30. Real Options Evaluation by Simulation + Threshold Curve A B Present Value (t = 0) Option F(t = 5.5) = V - D F(t = 0) = = F(t=5.5) * exp (- r*t) F(t = 8) = 0 Expires Worthless • Before the information revelation, V/D changes due the oil prices P (recall V = qPB and NPV = V – D). With revelation on q and B, the value V jumps.

  31. NYMEX-WTI Oil Prices: Spot x Futures • Note that the spot prices reach more extreme values and have more ‘nervous’ movements (more volatile) than the long-term futures prices

  32. Brent Oil Prices: Spot x Futures • Note that the spot prices reach more extreme values than the long-term futures prices

  33. Brent Oil Prices Volatility: Spot x Futures • Note that the spot prices volatility is much higher than the long-term futures volatility

  34. Other Parameters for the Simulation • Other important parameters are the risk-free interest rate r and the dividend yield d (or convenience yield for commodities) • Even more important is the difference r - d (the risk-neutral drift) or the relative value between r and d • Pickles & Smith (Energy Journal, 1993) suggest for long-run analysis (real options) to set r = d • “We suggest that option valuations use, initially, the ‘normal’ value of d, which seems to equal approximately the risk-free nominal interest rate. Variations in this value could then be used to investigate sensitivity to parameter changes induced by short-term market fluctuations” • Reasonable values for r and d range from 4 to 8% p.a. • By using r = d the risk-neutral drift is zero, which looks reasonable for a risk-neutral process

More Related