Regina Leader-Post

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 vice-chairman 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 Toronto-headquarte­red 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.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada