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Crude Oil Price Slump To Hit Oil Majors

Published 29/01/2015, 10:14

Given the headwinds being felt by major oil companies around the world, the share price performance since the beginning of last year while uninspiring has still out performed the oil price which given the macro economic back drop is all the more surprising.

In the last 12 months the oil majors have had to deal with the consequences of events in Ukraine and the Crimea as well as western government sanctions on Russia and the effects these sanctions have had on the profitability of their assets exposed to those sanctions.

Notwithstanding those concerns the past 12 months have been troubling ones for the oil companies as falling oil and gas prices have put downward pressure on margins, at a time when the companies have for the most part been looking to streamline their operations.

We’ve already seen the effects that the slump in the Oil price is having on the oilfield services providers in the US with both Baker Hughes Incorporated (NYSE:BHI) and Halliburton announcing job lossesas the companies see rig counts drop, and margins decline. We’ve also seen WBH Energy, a Texas based shale producer file for bankruptcy.

This time last year Royal Dutch Shell A (LONDON:RDSa) CEO Ben Van Buerden announced a significant sharper focus on costs and unnecessary capital expenditure by announcing a reduction in spending in its US operations of 20%, while scrapping further expenditure to drill for oil in Alaska.

The company also sold a number of LNG assets in Australia as it warned on profits for the first time in a decade, and recently cancelled a $6.5bn petrochemical project in Qatar as a result of the recent weakness in oil and gas prices, though this has been offset by yesterday’s announcement of an $11bn investment in a petrochemical plant in Basra Iraq.

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This morning’s Q4 numbers haven’t been received wellby the markets coming in as they do below expectations of $4.1bn. While this is obviously disappointing the fact that the $3.3bn number came in well above last year’s equivalent number of $2.9bnshould surely be treated as a net positive given that oil prices were that much higher then, which suggests that new CEO Ben Van Beurden’s strategy of targeted cost cutting appears to be bearing fruit.

Cash flow has improved for the full year, up 11%, with full year basic CCC earnings up 14%.There has been some speculation in some quarters that the dividend could come under threat and that might be a possibility if oil prices remain at these very low levels, but given Mr Van Beurden’s comments earlier this morning further cost cutting would likely come through first before that would be considered. The dividend came in as expected at 188c for the year, a rise of 4%.

Given all of this the shares have done well to outperform relative to the oil price in the last 12 months and still remain well above their lowest levels for the last 3 years. The share buyback program has probably helped in that regard and it appears investors still appear to prefer it to troubled sector peer BP Plc (LONDON:BP), whose numbers come out next week, and who could face a double whammy from the lower oil price and its exposure to Russia, via Rosneft (LONDON:ROSNl).

BP has had a troubled last five years as it continues to wrestle with the fall out of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on the Deepwater Horizon rig, and will likely hang over it for quite some time, and is still to some extent causing fluctuations in the share price even now.

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Chart: Brent vs Oil Stocks

These legacy items continue to weigh on the share pricebut there does appear to be evidence that the company could be past the worst with respect to that, with a slightly lower fine from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, though its problems in Russia are continuing to give management headaches. Having successfully offloaded its stake in Teekay Tankers Ltd (NYSE:TNK), it took on a whole set of other problems when it partnered up with Rosneft just before Russia decided to become the pariah of the western world when it decided to destabilise Ukraine and push in to the Crimea region.

The slide in the rouble as a result of the sanctions, as well as the oil price could well equate to a particularly sharp drop in its revenues for the fourth quarter, and has raised some concerns in some quarters about the sustainability of the company’s dividend, which currently yields just over 5%.

These concerns seem overstated given the dividend cover sits at a fairly healthy 3.3, and the company is more likely to cut costs first then start a share price slide, a fact the company alluded to in December when Bob Dudley suggested the company would “pare or re-phase” around $1bn of cap-ex over the next few quarters in accordance with market conditions.

US giant Exxon Mobil one of the world’s biggest companies has also been hit by the slide in the oil price and like its peers also has exposure to Russian assets, but due to its size and diversity has managed to also find itself somewhat insulated by the slide in oil prices. This doesn’t mean that it won’t have to make some difficult decisions going forward if oil prices remain low.

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Like its peers the company is looking to the growing LNG space to help offset the decline in its oil production businesses. It recently announced a new gas deal in Papua New Guinea, while it also recently started production at its third Sakhalin oil field which it runs alongside Rosneft affiliates.

Given these price pressures investors and markets will be looking quite closely at the hit to revenues margins and profits that these factors have had over the last 12 months and whether they predicate any pressure on company dividend policy going forward, particularly given that BP and Shell are big contributors to UK pension funds in terms of dividends.

The material (whether or not it states any opinions) is for general information purposes only, and does not take into account your personal circumstances or objectives. Nothing in this material is (or should be considered to be) financial, investment or other advice on which reliance should be placed. No opinion given in the material constitutes a recommendation by CMC Markets or the author that any particular investment, security, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

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