Barron\'s - 16.03.2020

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March 16, 2020 BARRON’S 31


Low Prices. High Energy


Here are seven companies that analysts recommended to Barron’s as ones that


could still prosper amid the slump in oil prices.


Recent Mkt YTD ’20E ’20E Div


Exploration & Production Price Val (bil) Chg EPS P/E Yield


Concho Resources / CXO $40.84 $8.0 -53.4% $3.23 12.7 2.0%


Nautral Gas


Cabot Oil & Gas / COG $16.85 $6.7 -3.2% $0.79 10.4 2.4%


Refining


Phillips 66 / PSX $48.95 $21.5 -56.1 $8.76 5.6 7.4%


Valero Energy / VLO 43.72 17.9 -53.3 7.90 5.5 9.0


Shipping


Euronav / EURN $10.08 $2.2 -19.6% $2.13 4.7 3.5%


International Seaways / INSW 22.77 0.7 -23.5 6.12 3.7 1.1


Scorpio Tankers / STNG 18.91 1.1 -51.9 4.07 4.7 2.1


E=Estimate. Source: Bloomberg


near term. Goldman Sachs analyst


Brian Singer estimates that oil could


fall to the “cash cost” of production for


U.S. and Canadian drillers, which he


estimates as being in the mid-$20s.


“It’s rational to think you’re looking


at a year’s worth of disruption,” says


Andy Brogan, leader of EY’s oil and


gas practice. “The trajectory out of the


disruption is a bit unknowable. For


the first time since the financial crisis,


we actually have a market that’s


shrinking.”


Bankruptcies are inevitable, though


they might not happen immediately.


The oil-and-gas industry was forced to


restructure after the 2014-2016 oil


price crash, which pulled Brent crude


down to $28 a barrel from $118. In


2016, 70 North American oil and gas


producers filed for bankruptcy, accord-


ing to the law firm Haynes and Boone.


However, companies have learned


some lessons—about hedging oil


prices and restraining growth in their


capital budgets, for instance. In 2017,


there were just 24 bankruptcies. But


too many drillers have feasted on


cheap debt since than.


“Bankers will be unwilling to refi-


nance at this time, given how much


riskier the sector has become with


geopolitical factors well beyond their


control,” Kathy Hipple, an analyst at


the Institute for Energy Economics


and Financial Analysis, wrote in an


email toBarron’s. “Some frackers have,


indeed, hedged and have become more


efficient at production—but remem-


ber, they’ve been cash flow-negative,


in aggregate, for a decade, with higher


oil prices.”


Among the companies that Hipple


pointed to as having troublesome debt


loads isOccidental Petroleum


(OXY), which slashed its dividend by


86% and its 2020 capital spending by


32% on Tuesday. Its decision to buy


Anadarko Petroleum last year leaves it


with $38.5 billion in debt sitting heav-


ily on its balance sheet.


Predictably, yields for energy


stocks in the high-yield debt market


spiked last week. Deutsche Bank pro-


jected at the start of the year that 15%


of high-yield energy debt would end


up in default, but now expects the


market to go “materially above that.”


Indeed, even debt of companies


listed as investment-grade, including


Occidental,Continental Resources


(CLR), andOvintiv(OVV), have been


trading at distressed levels—more


than 10 percentage points above Trea-


suries—at times.


Predicting which companies go


bankrupt is not necessarily a useful


pursuit, however. Stifel’s Whitfield


expects the actual bankruptcy rate to


be relatively low, despite the distress,


because “banks don’t want to own that


many energy companies.” He expects


many lenders to restructure the debt


to keep producers afloat.


It’s more useful to consider which


companies might cut their dividends.


The two biggest U.S. oil producers,


Exxon Mobil(XOM) andChevron


(CVX), offered investors little in the


way of new guidance last week, al-


though analysts suspect they will pro-


vide updates soon. Few on Wall Street


expect near-term payout reductions


from either of those heavyweights. But


J.P. Morgan analyst Phil Gresh thinks


Chevron should immediately cease its


stock buybacks.


Asked about its buyback,dividend,


and drilling plans, a Chevron spokes-


person wrote that the company has


the strongest balance sheet and lowest


breakeven prices in the industry, but


added that it is “reviewing alternatives


to reduce capital expenditures.”


Exxon, which presented an aggres-


sive drilling plan to investors just a


week before the crash, had no update


about its intentions, aside from point-


ing to a statement that CEO Darren


Woods made at its investor day, which


said that the company will “continu-


ously evaluate our priorities.” The


energy giant paid out $14.7 billion in


dividends to shareholders last year; its


$5.4 billion in free cash flow didn’t


come close to covering it. Exxon’s divi-


dend yield was over 9% at the end of


the week. Chevron’s hit 6.2%.


Oil services companies—particu-


larly those that drill on land—could


be in even worse shape than the pro-


ducers.


Bernstein analyst Nicholas Green


pointed to five that he thinks need to


cut their dividends sooner, rather than


later:TechnipFMC(FTI),Helmer-


ich & Payne(HP),Patterson-UTI


Energy(PTEN),Petrofac(POFCY)


andSchlumberger(SLB). He wrote


that “our models show insufficient


free cash flow out to 2022, even before


the latest crash.”


None of those companies re-


sponded to requests fromBarron’sfor


comment.


In the long run, the U.S. shale in-


dustry will survive after a painful re-


trenchment. Saudi Arabia and Rus-


sia’s “power” moves are actually a sign


of weakness, some experts say.


“This is the death rattle of OPEC


really,” argues Ryan Giannotto, direc-


tor of research at ETF provider Gran-


iteShares. “They not only failed to


reach an agreement; the agreement


they reached was to all-out destroy


each other.”B


“It’s rational to think


you’re looking at


a year’s worth of


disruption, The


trajectory out of


the disruption is


a bit unknowable.”


Andy Brogan, leader of EY’s
oil and gas practice

BalanceofPower


The U.S. share of the global oil market is expected to shrink as Saudi Arabia


and Russia ramp up production.


Source: Stifel E=Estimated


2019E Global Oil Production 2022E Global Oil Production

0

25

50

75

100%

OPEC U.S. Russia Other

Debt Binge


Weak balance


sheets have left


some energy


companies


vulnerable to the


slump in prices.


$120 B


The amount of


debt that oil and


gas producers


have accumulated


in the past five


years

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