Saturday, 29 November 2014

Oil Crash Will See Drillers Cut Spending to Shield Dividends

Photographer: Andrew Burton/Getty Images
A derrick hand for Raven Drilling, drills for oil in the Bakken shale formation on July... Read More
For the world’s largest oil companies, the accelerating crash in crude prices will probably mean scrapping investments from America’s shale fields to the seas off Brazil as CEOs protect dividend payments.
The parts of the industry most exposed to cutbacks include certain U.S. shale deposits, where break-even costs vary from $40 to more than $100 a barrel. While some, such Russian oil tycoon Leonid Fedun, say the slump will halt a good deal of production, others argue that the shale industry will be able to maintain production for some time at these price levels.
In the longer term, the greater dilemma for oil producers is that even as crude drops the costs of developing new reserves remain higher than ever. An extended period of lower prices will
prevent companies from being able to replace production as existing fields dwindle. In ensuring investors get paid, companies may have to sacrifice future growth.
Oil industry shares fell worldwide after crude slumped to a four-year low near $70 a barrel on the back of OPEC’s decision yesterday to leave output unchanged. Investors are concerned that companies including Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) and BP Plc (BP/) won’t have enough cash to cover both investment plans and dividends.
Photographer: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr./Bloomberg
Russian oil tycoon Leonid Fedun, say the slump will halt a good deal of production,... Read More
“What we are about to see is a knife taken to non-OPEC industry capex,” analysts an Bernstein Research led by Oswald Clint said in a note today. “It’s painful, but yields remain payable.”

Most Vulnerable

As well as shale, the most vulnerable projects include deep water offshore developments and Canadian tar sands, the sources that the International Energy Agency said this month are vital to ensuring global energy supply in coming years.
U.S. shale, for instance, accounted for about 20 percent of world investment in oil in 2013 and supplied only four percent of global production, according to Mark Lewis and Peter Oppitzhauser, analysts at Kepler Cheuvreux SA in Paris. Other places vulnerable to lower spending include heavy oil fields in Venezuela, Brazil’s deepwater and Iraq, Lewis said.
“The irony of the times is that the break-even threshold for oil prices is higher, not lower, than it has been,” said CSIS Energy and National Security Program director Sarah Ladislaw. “To the extent that the market is not incentivizing that investment, what you end up with is a period, five to 10 years in the future, where there has been dramatic under-investment.”

Shale Boom

The IEA, an adviser for the world’s industrialized countries, warned this month in its annual World Energy Outlook that the U.S. shale boom is masking threats to supply. With shale drilling now set to slow, global oil security is uncertain because of the cost of developing new oil and gas reserves.
“At $70 a barrel for Brent, it is hard to imagine how any new major international project gets the green light from the majors,” Lewis at Kepler Cheuvreux said in an e-mail yesterday. Prices at these levels “will also put a huge squeeze on shale companies looking to drill new wells.”
Even before yesterday’s 6.7 percent tumble in benchmark Brent crude prices, oil producers expected to reduce investment. Shell, Italy’s Eni SpA (ENI) and Houston-based ConocoPhillips all said last month they would cut capital spending to maintain profitability.
At today’s prices, exploration spending is likely to fall 50 percent, while investment in developing new fields already discovered will drop 10 percent, Bernstein said.
“Oil companies will keep focusing on high-margin projects,” said Teodor Sveen Nilsen, an analyst at Swedbank Markets in Oslo. “That will happen at the expense of low-margin things like oil sands and Arctic projects.”

Best Payers

Meanwhile, large oil and gas companies remain among the best payers of dividends. Shell’s yield today is 5.4 percent, while BP pays 6 percent. That compares with an average of 2.3 percent for the MSCI World Index.
While U.S. companies typically pay less in dividends than European counterparts, Chevron Corp.’s yield is 3.9 percent and Exxon Mobil Corp.’s is 3 percent.
“We do not see any of the companies covering both capex and dividends in the current environment,” Barclays Plc analysts said in a note to clients yesterday on the impact of lower prices on the top European oil producers. “Recent conference calls have seen management teams highlight that dividends remain a priority.”
If necessary, oil producers are likely to allow borrowing to rise to ensure that lower cash flows don’t mean lower payments to investors, Bernstein said in their note.

Great Pain

For the majors, “the pressure they’re going to be under to cut capex is going to be enormous if prices do not pick up over the next six months,” Kepler Cheuvreux’s Lewis said. “The pain is going to be very great.”
The predicted plunge in investment may change the long-term outlook for global supply growth, switching today’s relative glut for a squeeze in a few years’ time. In fact, that’s likely to be part of the thinking of Saudi Arabia, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’s dominant member, in keeping production unchanged. The country’s oil minister said before this week’s meeting in Vienna that the market will “stabilize itself.”
As investment is curtailed, the outlook for prices will improve, Bobby Tudor, CEO of Houston-based investment bank Tudor Pickering Holt & Co., said in an interview before OPEC’s decision.
“The greater the fall, the greater the snapback,” he said.

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