Table of Contents

Finding and Development Costs (F&D Costs)

Finding and Development Costs (or F&D Costs) is a crucial performance metric used primarily in the Oil and Gas industry. Think of it as the price tag for restocking the shelves. Oil and gas companies are in the business of finding, extracting, and selling a finite resource. Every barrel they sell depletes their inventory. F&D costs measure how much money an exploration and production (E&P) company spends to add one new barrel of oil (or equivalent in natural gas) to its proven reserves. These costs include everything from geological surveys and exploratory drilling (the 'finding' part) to drilling production wells and building the necessary infrastructure to get the oil out of the ground (the 'development' part). A lower F&D cost is a sign of efficiency and a powerful indicator of a company's long-term health and profitability.

Why F&D Costs Matter to Investors

For an E&P company, its reserves are its lifeblood. Without finding new sources of oil and gas to replace what's being produced and sold, the company will eventually run out of business. F&D costs cut right to the heart of this challenge, telling you how effectively and economically a company is managing its core business. Imagine two corner stores. Both sell a can of soda for $1. Store A gets its cans from a wholesaler for $0.30 each, while Store B, due to poor logistics, pays $0.60. It’s obvious which store is the better business. In the oil patch, F&D costs are that wholesale price. A company with a consistently low F&D cost per barrel has a massive Competitive Moat. It can weather downturns in commodity prices better than its rivals and generate far superior profits when prices are high. Conversely, a company with rising F&D costs is a red flag; it may be struggling to find new oil, operating in high-cost regions, or simply being managed inefficiently.

Calculating F&D Costs

While the concept is straightforward, the calculation requires a bit of detective work in a company's financial statements.

The Basic Formula

The most common way to calculate F&D costs is on a per-unit basis, typically per Barrel of Oil Equivalent (BOE), which standardizes oil and natural gas into a single unit. The simplified formula is:

You can find the “Total Exploration & Development Costs” in the company's financial reports, often detailed within the discussion of Capital Expenditures (CapEx). The “Total Proved Reserves Added” is found in the supplemental oil and gas information, usually tucked away in the footnotes of the Annual Report (10-K).

Important Considerations

The Value Investor's Perspective

For a value investor, F&D cost isn't just a number; it's a window into the quality of the business and its management.

A Measure of Management's Skill

Consistently low F&D costs are a hallmark of a disciplined and skilled management team. It shows they are excellent capital allocators, selecting the best projects and executing them efficiently. They aren't just throwing money at any hole in the ground; they are making smart, high-return investments with shareholder money.

The Ultimate Margin of Safety

The core of Value Investing is buying assets for less than their intrinsic value, creating a Margin of Safety. For an E&P company, the margin is created between the cost to get a barrel of oil out of the ground and the price it sells for. F&D is the largest and most important part of that cost. Let's say Company X has a three-year average F&D cost of $15 per barrel and its production cost is $10 per barrel. Its total “all-in” cost is $25.

Now consider Company Y, with an F&D cost of $30 and the same production cost, for a total of $40. At $30 oil, this company is losing money on every new barrel it develops, putting its survival at risk. The value investor will always favor Company X for its superior resilience and long-term earning power. When analyzing an E&P company, comparing its F&D cost to the price of the underlying commodity is one of the most powerful analytical tools you have.