Big Oil Resists Urge to Spend

(Bloomberg) -- Forget "Drill, baby, drill!" The world’s biggest oil companies aren’t returning to their spendthrift ways, despite crude’s recovery.
Equinor ASA and ConocoPhillips kicked off the earnings season for the energy majors on Thursday with an emphasis on restraint despite reporting their highest profits in four years, a possible indication of what to expect from the rest of the industry.
Analysts are forecasting record cash flows for crude drillers after oil prices surged, prompting fears the industry would return to lavish spending. Morgan Stanley last week said that the 46 percent advance in international oil prices from the third quarter of 2017 will fuel the biggest profit jump since prices began to crash in 2014.
Equinor Chief Executive Officer Eldar Saetre pledged to keep a sharp focus on costs as the market recovers. His words were met by actions as the company trimmed its 2018 budget by 9.1 percent to $10 billion, even as cash flow surged.
ConocoPhillips, the largest independent explorer, disclosed results that trounced analysts’ estimates, but Chief Executive Officer Ryan Lance said on an earnings conference call it’s being "laser-focused on discipline."
Conoco raised its full-year spending estimate 1.7 percent to $6.1 billion, citing decisions outside the company’s control such as drilling partners expanding operations. The Houston-based explorer handed almost $1 billion back to shareholders, part of a $9 billion expansion of buybacks announced in July.
For 2019, Conoco expects capital spending to be roughly in line with this year’s drilling budget. Lance said that after years of cost-cutting and efficiency gains following the price crash, Conoco’s profits are back where they were in 2014, when Brent was closer to $100 a barrel. Brent traded at around $77 Thursday.
Clear Priorities
Other oil majors will show in the coming days whether they’re taking the same approach. Total SA and Eni SpA are due to report Friday, followed by Exxon Mobil Corp., BP Plc and Chevron Corp. next week.
There are plenty of reasons to stay cautious in a market that remains uncertain and volatile. Since Brent’s rally to $86 a barrel earlier this month, it’s dropped due to concerns over demand. Plus, there’s a tendency for prices for equipment and services to rise as higher prices spur more activity, Equinor’s Saetre said.
Conserving Cash
“What costs will look like in a stronger market is very important for investors,” he said in an interview after the company’s earnings presentation in Oslo. “You can’t have one culture when prices are low and another culture when prices are high. You need to build a culture that takes us through these cycles.”
Major oil companies were forced to slash expenses during the deepest industry downturn in a generation, with international oil prices dipping close to $27 a barrel in 2016. That slump appears to be over after crude’s recent gains amid supply threats across the globe.
“We continue to take good care of our cash,” Saetre said in a Bloomberg television interview. “We’d also like to see a strengthening of our balance sheet.”
Conoco shares rose 4.1 percent to $68.37 at 2:46 p.m. in New York trading. Equinor was almost unchanged at 214.2 kroner at the close in Oslo.
To contact the reporters on this story: Mikael Holter in Oslo at mholter2@bloomberg.net ;Alex Nussbaum in New York at anussbaum1@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net ;James Herron at jherron9@bloomberg.net
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
- McDermott Receives Delisting Warning
- Schlumberger Unit Wins Anchor Subsea Contract
- Transocean Rig to Mobilize in Caribbean
- Oil Up After Trump Approves Trade Deal
- OPEC+ Price Spike Will be Short-Lived
- US Adds Four Oil Rigs
- Shell Signs $10B Revolving Credit Facility
- Global Upstream Investment to Dip in 2020
- Oil Prices Up for the Week
- Pipeline-Starved Canadian Energy Shines
- McDermott Receives Delisting Warning
- Schlumberger CFO to Step Down
- Schlumberger Unit Wins Anchor Subsea Contract
- $5.7B Deepwater Project Wins Chevron Approval
- EIA Raises Oil Price Forecast Again
- Another Gulf Coast LNG Project Hits Milestone
- Chevron Eyes $11B Writedown Amid Weak Gas Prices
- Talos Splashes $640MM on US GOM Assets
- Transocean Rig to Mobilize in Caribbean
- Kawasaki Launches Pioneering Hydrogen Vessel
- Billionaire Fracking Brothers Hit Hard by Permian Holdings
- Halliburton Confirms More Layoffs in Oklahoma
- McDermott Receives Delisting Warning
- SPO Crew Kidnapped Offshore Equatorial Guinea
- Shale Has Delinked US Oil and Gas Prices
- Halliburton Shutters Oklahoma Office, Cuts 800 Jobs
- Who Actually Controls the World's Oil?
- BP Makes Gas Discovery Offshore Trinidad
- ConocoPhillips Unveils its 10-Year Operational Plan
- Icahn to Seek Control of Oxy Board