New short position: BEXP

I have been thinking about Brigham Exploration Co. (Nasdaq: BEXP) off and on since last August, when U.S. Energy Corp (Nasdaq: USEG) entered a drilling participation agreement with Brigham in Brigham’s Bakken oil properties. Today I shorted BEXP at $13.11. Because BEXP was in financially dicey straights back then (it had an Altman Z”-Score1 in the distress zone. ), and was coming up on a drilling deadline, cash-rich, prudently-managed USEG was able to enter this deal on favorable terms. As I have mentioned on my previous blog, USEG has a number of other irons in the fire besides its drilling participation deal with BEXP (e.g., its geothermal investment, its molybdenum property, its uranium properties), but it’s been the BEXP deal that has largely driven USEG’s stock price since the deal was announced. See how USEG’s stock price starts moving at the end of last August:

USEG versus BEXP

Since I shorted a dollar amount of BEXP equivalent to my long position in USEG, and since both stocks have been moving in recent months mainly on news of their shared Bakken deal, this is essentially a pairs trade (USEG was trading at $5.07 when I shorted BEXP today, but my average cost on USEG is about $2.80). Currently, USEG has an Altman Z”-score of about 12.4 and BEXP has an Altman Z”-score of about -2.6. Scores above 2.6 are considered to be in the safe zone, and scores below 1.1 are in the distress zone .

1Recall that Professor Edward Altman created his original Altman Z-score model to predict the default risk of manufacturing companies. In its initial test, the Altman Z-Score was found to be 72% accurate in predicting bankruptcy two years prior to the event, with a Type II error (false positives) of 6% (Altman, 1968). In a series of subsequent tests covering three different time periods over the next 31 years (up until 1999), the model was found to be approximately 80-90% accurate in predicting bankruptcy one year prior to the event, with a Type II error (classifying the firm as bankrupt when it does not go bankrupt) of approximately 15-20% (Altman, 2000). The Altman Z”-Score is Professor Altman’s modified formula designed for application to non-manufacturing firms. For more on the Altman Z”-Score, including an example of it in action, please see Applying the Altman Z”-Score Model to a Non-Manufacturing Company.

Related posts:

  1. Revisiting an Altman Z”-score pairs trade Back in January, on the old blog, I mentioned this...
  2. That didn’t work “That” being shorting Brigham Exploration Co. (Nasdaq: BEXP) at $13.11...
  3. New short position: USG Shorted sheet rockĀ  company USG today at $12.45. As I...
  4. USEG files its 10-K [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="512" caption="One year chart for USEG"][/caption] U.S....

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  • After the close yesterday, BEXP announced positive drilling results in wells that USEG is not participating in. I had set a stop limit buy order on this position, but BEXP opened above that level today. Last time it announced positive drilling results though (on Jan 5th), the stock shot up the next day, only to give back its gains within the next several days. We'll see what happens this time.
  • I should note that I canceled my stop limit buy order on this position earlier this week and decided to let it ride a little.
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