AFP / DAVID MCNEW
Oil companies are trying to cut investment
spending to help them weather the coronavirus storm and a damaging price
war between Saudi Arabia and Russia
Confronted with a dizzying drop in prices, oil firms face
a real challenge as they try to cut investment spending in order to
survive a coronavirus-induced collapse in demand coupled with a
Russia-Saudi Arabia price war.
Investment in oil exploration and
production was set to hit just over half a trillion dollars this year
according to the French research body IFPEN, as firms sought to maintain
and expand output.
But the emergence of the coronavirus, which has seen
nations across the world confine citizens at home and shutter businesses
to slow its spread, has upended all forecasts.
The International
Energy Agency, which advises oil-importing nations on energy policy, now
expects the first annual drop in oil demand since 2009 during the
global financial crisis, as the global economy tips into recession.
The
main international benchmark, Brent crude, has fallen from just shy of
$60 per barrel to under $25 this week, before regaining some lost
ground.
The main US benchmark, WTI, tumbled from nearly $54 to just over $20.
Not all of the drop is due to the coronavirus.
The
price of oil had been supported for the past couple of years by
production limits agreed by the OPEC oil cartel led by Saudi Arabia and a
number of other producers including Russia.
However Russia and
Saudi Arabia failed to agree earlier this month on deeper cuts to take
account of falling demand due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Saudi
Arabia subsequently slashed prices and announced it would boost output
and Russia followed suit, leading to the vertiginous drop in prices.
- Cut and shift -
"All
companies in the sector will be seeing what more they can do to cut
costs, shift their activities to the lowest cost fields they can, trim
investment and think hard about what dividend they can pay," said
Professor David Elmes at Warwick Business School.
While reducing
investment is relatively easy in the near term, the longer prices remain
low the more firms will need to look at shutting down production that
is more expensive, such as offshore.
"For the majors, the prospect
of $30 per barrel of oil or below for a period of time is an extreme
challenge," said Biraj Borkhataria, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets.
He
said that if these prices persist more than six months, then oil majors
would need to cut into the generous dividends they pay -- which is why
they are prized by many investors -- and that prospect has already been
partly incorporated into their share prices.
- 'Unprecedented' -
Saudi Aramco says it will cut investment to $25-$30 billion this year, a modest drop on the $32.8 billion it spent last year.
"Based
on this unprecedented environment, we are evaluating all appropriate
steps to significantly reduce capital and operating expenses in the near
term," said Exxon Mobil Corporation's chief executive Darren Woods.
British
oil major BP is targeting a 20 percent drop in spending this year, its
chief financial officer Brian Gilvary said in an interview on Bloomberg
television.
There are also many smaller oil companies who may struggle.
"The medium-sized independent companies will be hit hard," said Moez Ajmi at auditing firm EY in France.
"Decisions will be taken to delay projects and we'll see restructurings of debt."
The
boom in shale oil production made the United States the world's top
producer and even a net exporter, but the industry is fragile.
Many
of the independent shale firms have been built on debt and even before
the drop in prices had trouble turning a profit, according to analysts.
- Poor returns -
Environmental activists can barely hide their joy at the difficulties the oil industry faces.
"We
consider it is pretty much good news considering that these
(exploration and development) projects shouldn't see the light of day
given the urgency of climate change," said Cecile Marchand of the French
chapter of Friends of the Earth.
She acknowledged abandoning these projects may not be permanent unless major political and economic policy changes are made.
Marchand
also warned of the risk of "a concentration of the market in the hands
of the majors who are more resilient that the small firms."
Elmes at Warwick Business School said some positive outcomes were also possible.
The
European oil and gas majors have already indicated they intend to
reduce their reliance on these fuels and become more active in
renewables such as wind and solar.
"There will be intense discussions on what they can do to move faster," he said.
The industry as a whole may also find it is no longer the darling of investors.
"Bankers
will throw up their hands and bend to the pressure from institutional
investors now demanding transparency for the emissions associated with
their investments," said Elmes.
"The profitability of the oil and
gas sector used to be attractively high but now it has the worst return
over the last five years across 33 different industries," he noted.
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