Edmonton Journal

Famed energy analyst retires, saddened by Canada’s oil policy

- MICHAEL BELLUSCI

Martin King spent his final day at GMP FirstEnerg­y on Friday after nearly twenty-two years with the firm, frustrated at the direction Canadian energy policy is going.

Known simply as “Marty” throughout Canada’s oilpatch in Alberta, King currently serves as director of institutio­nal research, focusing on oil and gas, where he’s watched Alberta recently mandate an OPEC-style output cut to boost weak domestic commodity prices.

At age 52, King ’s not a fan. “Personally I was kind of opposed to a government interventi­on, I mean the market was already sending the price signals needed to curtail” output, and producers had already begun to announce cuts in response to Canada’s pipeline bottleneck­s.

As Canada’s oil and gas industry both fights for investor attention and grapples with the need for more pipelines, King joins a frustrated group of energy profession­als voicing their displeasur­e with Canada’s energy policy — or at least voting with their feet.

Former GMP FirstEnerg­y vicechairm­an Jim Davidson also recently announced his retirement from the firm.

There “seems to be no understand­ing or appreciati­on of the energy sector in terms of what it contribute­s to overall GDP and revenue generation for the country,” King said, adding that investors are showing “despondenc­y” toward Canadian energy, sending capital elsewhere.

And lately companies are starting to speak up too.

Just last week, after cutting its dividend in response to Canadian oil price volatility, Calgary-based Cardinal Energy Ltd. encouraged its shareholde­rs “to voice their disapprova­l with the Alberta government and their local Federal Member of Parliament on the lack of progress on the constructi­on of new export pipelines out of Western Canada.”

But King isn’t giving up on the role Canada can play in global energy, adding that the domestic industry “is still a vibrant industry ... it’s something that’s still going to be playing a role whether (policy-makers) like it or not 1015-20-25 years from now.”

King spent the majority of his career at Calgary-based energy investment bank FirstEnerg­y Capital, which merged with Torontohea­d quartered GMP Securities in 2016.

For today, King’s taking the policy debate in stride. “I really have no idea what I’ll be doing ” in the future, King told Bloomberg early Friday. “I’m sure people will be reaching out to me or I’ll be reaching out to them.”

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