The Successful Efforts Method is a conservative accounting principle used primarily by oil and gas exploration companies under standards like U.S. GAAP and IFRS. Under this method, only the costs directly associated with discovering new oil and gas reserves can be capitalized on the balance sheet as an asset. All other exploration costs, including those for drilling 'dry holes' (unsuccessful wells), are immediately charged as expenses on the income statement. This stands in stark contrast to the alternative Full Cost Method, where all exploration costs, successful or not, are capitalized. The Successful Efforts Method, therefore, provides a more immediate and often sobering reflection of a company's exploration success. For investors, this means reported earnings will be more volatile, but it also offers a clearer, more transparent view of a company's ongoing operational profitability.
Let's make this simple. Imagine 'Wildcatter Oil Inc.' spends $20 million on two exploration projects of equal cost.
Using the Successful Efforts Method, Wildcatter Oil would:
The logic is simple: if you didn't create a long-term asset, you can't record it as one. The failure is recognized right away, not hidden on the balance sheet for years to come.
For an investor, understanding this accounting choice is not just academic; it’s fundamental to properly valuing an oil and gas company.
This method aligns perfectly with a value investing philosophy. It enforces financial discipline by forcing a company to immediately acknowledge its exploration failures. A dry hole is a business expense, and this method treats it as such. It prevents a company from inflating its asset base with the costs of unproductive holes, giving investors a truer picture of management's skill in finding profitable reserves. A company that voluntarily chooses this more conservative method may be signaling a commitment to transparency and prudent capital allocation.
This is where the rubber meets the road for investors. You cannot fairly compare two oil companies without first checking which accounting method they use. Consider two companies, SE Corp (using Successful Efforts) and FC Corp (using Full Cost). If both spend $100 million on exploration and have the same level of success, their financial statements will look dramatically different. FC Corp will report higher earnings and a larger asset base because it capitalizes all its costs. An uninformed investor just screening for a low P/E ratio or price-to-book ratio might wrongly conclude that FC Corp is the superior company. A savvy investor knows to check the accounting policies in the financial footnotes to understand how those numbers were generated.
The Successful Efforts Method is the straight-talking, no-nonsense accountant of the oil patch. It provides a more conservative and arguably more realistic view of a company's financial performance, even if it creates more volatile reported profits. When analyzing an energy company, one of your first steps should always be to identify which accounting method it uses. It’s a crucial piece of the puzzle for separating the gushers from the dry holes in your portfolio.