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  • Big Oil in BIG trouble!

    Oil majors’ finances strained by price slump

    The sudden fall in the price of crude oil, from $120 to just $60 a barrel in six months, is the biggest economic shock of 2014 and the fallout is expected to be profound and long-lasting, especially for the oil majors

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    S&P outlined three key concerns around a group of the industry’s biggest European producers: Shell, Total, BP, Eni and BG Group. Photo: Alamy









    By Ben Marlow

    6:30PM GMT 27 Dec 2014

    1 Comment


    The finances of Britain’s three biggest oil majors are looking more stretched amid the sudden fall in the oil price, ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has warned.


    S&P said the dramatic deterioration in the oil price outlook had prompted the agency to take a number of “rating actions” on European oil and gas majors including Shell, BP, and BG Group.

    The agency raised a number of concerns including the debt levels of the big oil producers, which have increased 50pc since the global financial crisis erupted.


    The sudden fall in the price of crude oil, from $120 to just $60 a barrel in six months, is the biggest economic shock of 2014 and the fallout is expected to be profound and long-lasting, especially for the oil majors.


    S&P outlined three key concerns around a group of the industry’s biggest European producers: Shell, Total, BP, Eni and BG Group.

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    The first is debt levels, which have jumped from a combined $162.9bn (£105bn) for the five companies at the end of 2008 to an estimated $240bn in 2014.

    Secondly, while borrowings have risen, dividends have also jumped, leading to “a very substantial cash flow deficit”, S&P said.

    Lastly, costs and capex “have increased materially”. The ratings agency has revised the outlook on BP and Shell to negative. It took similar action on Italy’s Eni. BG Group and France’s Total were placed on “CreditWatch”,

    On BP, the ratings agency said “the outlook revision to negative reflects our concern that in 2015-16, cash flow generation might come under pressure”. It also said it could downgrade the company in the next six to 12 months if its debt profile deteriorated.
    It said Shell’s cash flow could be “significantly affected” by the lower oil price and the company was constrained by “hefty capital spending” and a fixed dividend payout.

    The ability of the biggest companies to withstand the oil price collapse depends on the extent to which they can reduce expenses, capital investment and dividends, the agency said.
    Its forecasts assumed a Brent oil price of $70 per barrel in 2015, $75 in 2016 and $85 thereafter.

  • #2
    Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

    LOL. Another piece of useless "analysis".

    This price drop is going to breathe fresh oxygen into the international oil majors (IOCs) and give them another extension on life before they ultimately go extinct some time later this century. The companies that are hurt most by this are the overlevered independents, the national oil companies that have too much deep water offshore exposure such as Brazil's much touted Petrobras, or bought too many low grade assets at ridiculous prices (read: China's state oil companies).

    Unlike the multinational IOCs like Exxon, which have alternative strategies they can execute, Petrobras is a one trick pony. The IOCs, like ConocoPhillips, which sold much of the overseas holdings in recent years are now the best positioned to be hunters at the coming turkey shoot. If you doubt my assessment, check out how much free-cash flow Exxon and its peers are forecast to generate in 2015.
    Last edited by GRG55; December 28, 2014, 02:10 AM.

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    • #3
      Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

      Good.................Ok So what about French Total?
      Candian Oil sands going to take a early bath?

      Mike

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      • #4
        Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

        Originally posted by Mega View Post
        Good.................Ok So what about French Total?
        Candian Oil sands going to take a early bath?

        Mike
        The Chinese are the ones that blew their brains out buying the low grade Canadian oil sands assets (such as MEG Energy, Nexen). Suncor, Exxon, Syncrude and the others kept the good stuff up at "Fort McMoney". Total is a middle of the road oil company...hasn't done anything for the last 5 years and like all things French seems to have difficulty adapting quickly to a changing world.

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        • #5
          Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

          Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
          If you doubt my assessment, check out how much free-cash flow Exxon and its peers are forecast to generate in 2015.
          Looks like MRO is best positioned followed by XOM. This data is at end of Q-3 so I would expect these forecasts for companies to come in even lower at end of Q-4, 2014

          Name Symbol Sector 3-yr His FCF CAGR 5-yr. Proj FCF CAGR
          Marathon Oil MRO Energy -32.3% 51.7%
          Chevron CVX Energy -163.3% -255.2%
          ConocoPhillips COP Energy -129.9% -276.6%
          Exxon Mobil XOM Energy -19.5% 25.3%
          Hess HES Energy 32.2% -203.3%

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          • #6
            Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

            Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
            The Chinese are the ones that blew their brains out buying the low grade Canadian oil sands assets (such as MEG Energy, Nexen). Suncor, Exxon, Syncrude and the others kept the good stuff up at "Fort McMoney". Total is a middle of the road oil company...hasn't done anything for the last 5 years and like all things French seems to have difficulty adapting quickly to a changing world.

            Could be right, i thought Tanker stock would go from it knees to its death, but Frontline was UP 38% just before Xmas on China lease-ing ANYTHING that could float to ship/store "Cheap" oil.............

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            • #7
              Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
              The Chinese are the ones that blew their brains out buying the low grade Canadian oil sands assets (such as MEG Energy, Nexen). Suncor, Exxon, Syncrude and the others kept the good stuff up at "Fort McMoney". Total is a middle of the road oil company...hasn't done anything for the last 5 years and like all things French seems to have difficulty adapting quickly to a changing world.

              I don't know about oil business, but from a macro perspective, my thoughts as to why the Chinese will spend so much money buying worthless oil fields in Indonesia and Canada.

              It's for the same reason why Lenovo bought the ThinkPad brand - to buy the local network/visibility, expertise (e.g. Fracking techniques?) and goodwill. Lenovo propelled itself to become the largest PC maker in the world. Recently Lenovo also bought Motorola and IBM's low end server division.

              http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-1...f-the-day.html

              Lenovo Beats IBM Since 2004 PC Deal: Chart of the Day
              By Bloomberg News Dec 12, 2014 6:00 AM GMT+0800

              A decade after Lenovo Group Ltd. (992) bought International Business Machines Corp.’s personal-computer unit, shares of the Chinese company are up about 300 percent while “Big Blue’s” have lagged behind the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

              The CHART OF THE DAY tracks Lenovo, IBM, Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Inc. and the S&P 500 starting from Dec. 8, 2004, when the $1.25 billion deal was announced. IBM’s 67 percent gain through this Dec. 10 trailed the U.S. stock benchmark’s 72 percent increase and HP’s 77 percent. Shares of Dell, the largest PC maker 10 years ago, had tumbled by two-thirds before founder Michael Dell and Silver Lake Management took it private in a $24.9 billion leveraged buyout in 2013.

              “Low-cost, scale manufacturing plus PC focus was an advantage for Lenovo over U.S. counterparts,” said Stephen Yang, head of institutional research at Sun Hung Kai Financial Ltd. in Hong Kong. “Preferred PC vendor status by government and institutions in China provided Lenovo a stable base to be more aggressive in other countries.”

              Lenovo has consistently led HP since 2013 as the biggest PC maker, according to research firm Gartner Inc. The 2004 deal, which included IBM’s ThinkPad brand, vaulted the Chinese company from eighth at the time to third. Lenovo’s rally defied what Michael Dell told reporters the day the deal was unveiled: “When was the last time you saw a successful merger or acquisition in the computer industry?” he said. “It hasn’t happened in a long, long time.”

              Somewhat mirroring that transaction, Lenovo this October purchased IBM’s low-end server business for $2.1 billion, making it the third-largest server vendor behind HP and Dell. IBM divested to focus on areas such as cloud computing and data analytics. Also in October, the Chinese company bought Motorola Mobility from Google Inc. for $2.9 billion to boost its smartphone business to No. 3 globally. IBM is about 10 times bigger by market value than Lenovo’s $15 billion.

              “The principles we applied to the integration of the IBM PCD are still valid and will be applied now,” Lenovo Chief Executive Officer Yang Yuanqing told a management meeting in October, according to text supplied by a company spokesman. “Bringing teams from three different cultures together is a significant challenge. But it is one we at Lenovo have successfully faced before.”
              Last edited by touchring; December 29, 2014, 04:04 AM.

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              • #8
                Re: Big Oil in BIG trouble!

                Oh Yummy!

                Third of listed UK oil and gas drillers face bankruptcy

                Britain's oil and gas industry is running out of cash as low prices and high levels of debt threaten the sector, warns Company Watch

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                Experts warn rigs could be soon shutting down in the North Sea Photo: Alamy









                By Andrew Critchlow, Commodities editor

                11:53AM GMT 29 Dec 2014

                Comment


                A third of Britain’s listed oil and gas companies are in danger of running out of working capital and even going bankrupt amid a slump in the value of crude, according to new research.


                Financial risk management group Company Watch believes that 70pc of the UK’s publicly listed oil exploration and production companies are now unprofitable, racking up significant losses in the region of £1.8bn.


                Such is the extent of the financial pressure now bearing down on highly leveraged drillers in the UK that Company Watch estimates that a third of the 126 quoted oil and gas companies on AIM and the London Stock Exchange are generating no revenues.


                The findings are the latest warning to hit the oil and gas industry since a slump in the price of crude accelerated in November when the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) decided to keep its output levels unchanged. The decision has caused carnage in oil markets with a barrel of Brent crude falling 45pc since June to around $60 per barrel.


                The low cost of crude has added to the financial pressure on many UK listed drillers which are operating in offshore areas such as the North Sea where oil is more expensive to produce and discover.

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                Ewan Mitchell, head of analytics at Company Watch, said: “Many of the smaller quoted oil and gas companies were set up specifically to take advantage of historically high and rising commodity prices. The recent large falls in the price of oil and gas could leave the weaker companies in difficulties, especially the ones that need to raise funds to keep exploring.”

                Losses are expected to much deeper among privately-owned oil and gas explorers, which traditionally have more debt. Company Watch has warned that almost 90pc in the UK are loss making with accounts that show a £12bn accumulated black hole in their finances.

                Mr Mitchell said: “Investors in this sector need to focus primarily on the strength and structure of the balance sheet. A critical question is whether the balance sheet is sufficiently robust to keep the company in business until revenues are expected to flow and, crucially are they likely to be able to rely on existing funding lines while they wait?
                "Our fear is sustained low oil and gas prices will put an intolerable financial burden on the weaker companies, jeopardising many livelihoods."

                The findings of the Company Watch research are the latest downbeat analysis to hit the industry, which is preparing itself for oil prices to fall below current levels of $60 per barrel. Sir Ian Wood, founder of the oil and gas services giant Wood Group, warned earlier this month that the North Sea oil industry could lose 15,000 jobs in Scotland alone and that production could fall by 10pc as drillers cutback.

                According to energy consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie, around £55bn of oil and gas projects in the North Sea and Europe could be shelved should prices fall below their current levels.

                Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s recently flagged its concern of some of Europe’s biggest oil and gas groups such as Royal Dutch Shell, BP and BG Group. Its primary worry is debt levels which it says have jumped from a combined $162.9bn (£105bn) for the five largest European companies in the sector at the end of 2008 to an estimated $240bn in 2014.

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