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The
Company typically uses fixed rate swaps
and costless collars to hedge its exposure
to material changes in the price of
natural gas and crude oil. The Company
formally documents all relationships
between hedging instruments and hedged
items, as well as its risk management
objectives and strategy for undertaking
various hedge transactions. This process
includes linking all derivatives that
are designated cash flow hedges to forecasted
transactions. The Company also formally
assesses, both at the hedge's inception
and on an ongoing basis, whether the
derivatives that are used in hedging
transactions are highly effective in
offsetting changes in cash flows of
hedged transactions.
The Company's
Board of Directors sets all of the Company's
hedging policy, including volumes, types
of instruments and counterparties, on
a quarterly basis. These policies are
implemented by management through the
execution of trades by either the President
or Chief Financial Officer after consultation
and concurrence by the President, Chief
Financial Officer and Chairman of the
Board. The master contracts with the
authorized counterparties identify the
President and Chief Financial Officer
as the only Company representatives
authorized to execute trades. The Board
of Directors also reviews the status
and results of hedging activities quarterly.
USE OF ESTIMATES
The preparation
of financial statements in conformity
with generally accepted accounting principles
requires management to make estimates
and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and
liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts
of revenues and expenses during the
reporting periods. Actual results could
differ from these estimates. Significant
estimates include depreciation, depletion
and amortization of proved oil and natural
gas properties and future income taxes.
Oil and natural gas reserve estimates,
which are the basis for unit-of-production
depletion and the ceiling test, are
inherently imprecise and are expected
to change as future information becomes
available.
CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
Substantially
all of the Company's accounts receivable
result from oil and natural gas sales
or joint interest billings to third
parties in the oil and natural gas industry.
This concentration of customers and
joint interest owners may impact the
Company's overall credit risk in that
these entities may be similarly affected
by changes in economic and other conditions.
Historically, the Company has not experienced
credit losses on such receivables.
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