Not much seems more speculative than buying into a privately held oil services company in the Bakken oil patch of western North Dakota. Maybe Las Vegas real estate. Hollywood movies. A nightclub.
And no institutional investor seems more conservative than a Lutheran life insurer.
But MBI Energy Services of Belfield, N.D., is principally owned by a Minneapolis group that includes Thrivent Financial for Lutherans.
If Lutheran life insurers have jumped in, that should remove any remaining suspicions that the Bakken is maybe best left to speculators and opportunists.
This is not a new deal, either. Thrivent and its partners, including the Pohlad organization, invested in MBI two years ago, when many folks were still trying to figure out if the Bakken oil boom had legs. Good move, too, as MBI has since quadrupled in size.
Thrivent's Glen Vanic, a senior managing director, would only allow that he is "optimistic" the MBI investment will turn out well. This for a ball that clearly seems headed out of the park.
Vanic, who manages Thrivent's alternative investment portfolio that includes direct private equity, described a two-year deep dive into the Bakken opportunity, and "we reached the conclusion that the Bakken play is one of the least risky exploration and development plays in the United States."
The Bakken oil patch gets its name from the Bakken formation, a layer of rock roughly 2 miles down that contains the oil. It lies under a wide area of North Dakota, Montana and Canada. The Bakken formation is a thin but contiguous and consistent layer, Vanic said, making the odds of drilling success very predictable. And with newer techniques including the ability to bend a drilling shaft to go straight across the layer of rock, and with a great sweet crude product, the Bakken has, well, boomed.