Dividends In Focus As BP And Shell Report Full Year Numbers

 | Feb 02, 2016 05:29

Oil and gas companies have had a tough time in the last two years with the FTSE 350 Oil & Gas Producers Index plunging from levels of 8,870 in late 2014 to 12 year lows of 4,915 earlier this year.

Not surprisingly the decline in oil and natural gas prices has been the catalyst behind these sharp drops with crude oil prices falling to levels last seen at the end of 2003.

Even natural gas prices, which traditionally do well in the winter months, have struggled to show any inclination to rally particularly strongly, also down 45% since the end of 2014.

For companies and countries who borrowed heavily in the QE inspired investment boom to add new capacity between 2009 and 2012 as commodity prices surged higher, it has been especially painful, with fears about significant bankruptcies never too far way the longer prices stay as low as they are.

These concerns along with a continued Saudi Arabian inspired push to squeeze high cost producers out of the market has caused oil and gas companies of all sizes to cut back investment aggressively while continuing to reassure shareholders that dividend payments can be sustained.

This week we will get to hear full year results from BP (L:BP) and Royal Dutch Shell (L:RDSa) and the outcome isn’t likely to make for particularly comforting reading despite the sharp rebound in oil prices seen in the last week or so, which has helped pull the respective share prices off their multi year lows.

Amongst some of the questions being asked will be, will last week’s oil price be sustained, or will the continued lack of agreement between OPEC and non OPEC countries continue to keep prices low?

With both companies significant contributors of dividend income in the FTSE100 their results are always keenly scrutinised, even more so now at a time when oil and gas prices have dropped 70% in the last 18 months, and with both companies under pressure to contain their costs.

As it stands, BP has already announced 4,000 job losses earlier this year, with 600 in the North Sea as well as further capital expenditure cuts in an attempt to ride out the storm, but there is a worry that with a dividend yield of 7.3% and a dividend cover of 0.5 it could be susceptible to a cut.

These sorts of concerns also help explain why the share price has come under pressure, but it is notable that despite the sharp fall in the oil price the shares haven’t hit the lows seen in the wake of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill at around 296p.