The Wall St.Journal 24Feb2020

(lu) #1

B2| Monday, February 24, 2020 ** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


and Africa decide on whether
to move forward with huge ex-
port expansions that could re-
duce the need for U.S. proj-
ects. In addition to Tellurian,
Freeport LNG, owned by
founder Michael Smith,Global
Infrastructure Partnersand
Osaka GasCo., andCameron
LNGLLC, owned by affiliates
ofSempra Energy,Mitsubishi
Corp.,TotalSA, andMitsui&
Co., are planning to expand ex-
isting U.S. facilities.
Asian and European buyers
are stretched to absorb the
LNG circulating on ships
around the globe. Some have
been turned away in China,
following the outbreak of coro-
navirus. Indian natural-gas
companyGAIL (India)Ltd. has
resold some U.S. cargoes in the
past year, according to people
familiar with the matter.
“There is only so much ap-
petite globally for supply from
the furthest supplier in the
world to Asian markets,” said
Madeline Jowdy, senior direc-
tor of global gas and LNG for

and energy ties between the
countries, the official said.
Mr. Trump will try to lock
down a prospective deal publi-
cized when Prime Minister Na-
rendra Modi visited Houston
in September. At that time,
Mr. Trump touted a $7.5 bil-
lion nonbinding LNG agree-
ment between fledgling U.S.
exporterTellurianInc. and In-
dia’sPetronet LNGLtd.
Such a deal would put Tel-
lurian’s proposed U.S. Gulf
Coast export facility, the $27
billion Driftwood LNG project
in Louisiana, closer to the to-
tal commitments it needs to
move forward, and secure a
trade victory for Mr. Trump.
Tellurian Chief Executive
Meg Gentle, Chairman Charif
Souki and other company offi-
cials are headed to India this
week to continue negotiations
with Petronet. In an interview,
Ms. Gentle said she appreci-
ates the president’s highlight-
ing the role of energy in the
U.S. economy and isn’t
alarmed by a reduction in
long-term contracting.
“I view that as a huge posi-
tive,” Ms. Gentle said. “We’re
seeing fewer and fewer long-
term contracts because buyers
and sellers are becoming more
comfortable that the market is
going to be there.”
Ms. Gentle said Tellurian
has roughly two-thirds of the
commitments it needs to go
forward with the Driftwood
project and is working toward
completing a deal with Petro-
net by the end of March.
Some analysts believe 2020
is a pivotal year for the U.S.
LNG export industry, as low-
cost rivals in the Middle East

INDEX TO BUSINESSES


These indexes cite notable references to most parent companies and businesspeople
in today’s edition. Articles on regional page inserts aren’t cited in these indexes.

A
Aetna...........................B3
Airbus ........................A1
Alibaba Group Holding
B4
Alphabet................B4,B9
Amazon.com..........B5,B6
Anadarko Petroleum
Corp...........................B1
Apple......................B6,B9
AT&T............................B6
B
Baker Hughes.............B6
Bank of America.........B9
Berkshire Hathaway
B1,B6
Boeing....................A1,B6
Box ...........................B10
C
Cheniere Energy..........B1
Chevron.......................B2
Credit Karma...............B1
Crown Affair...............B5
CVS Health..................B3
D
Dell Technologies........B4
Diamondback Energy..B2
Domino's Pizza...........B1

Dropbox.....................B10
E
Exxon Mobil...........B2,B6
F
Facebook......................B6
Fidelity Investments..B1
Freeport LNG
Development.............B1
G
Greylock Capital
Management.............B2
I
ING Groep N.V...........B10
Intuit...........................B1
K
Karner Blue Animal
Impact Fund..............B6
KPMG International....B4
Kraft Heinz.................B9
M
Microsoft..........B4,B6,B9
N
Netflix....................B3,B9
O
Occidental Petroleum.B1
Oracle..........................B4

P
Pacific Investment
Management.............B1
Plaid.............................B4
S
Seed Health................B5
Starboard Value........B10
Starbucks....................B6
T
Tencent Holdings........B4
Tesla............................B6
Textron........................B6
Twitter........................A4
U
UBS Group.................B10
UnitedHealth Group....B3
V
Vale..............................B3
VMware.......................B4
VR Capital Group........B2
W
WarnerMedia..............B3
Wells Fargo.................B9
Western Asset
Management.............B2

INDEX TO PEOPLE


BUSINESS & FINANCE


‘The Call of the Wild,’ starring Harrison Ford, opened at No. 2.

20TH CENTURY FOX/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Estimated Box-Office Figures, Through Sunday
SALES, IN MILLIONS
FILM DISTRIBUTOR WEEKEND* CUMULATIVE % CHANGE
1.Sonic the Hedgehog Paramount $26.3 $106.6 -55
2.The Call of the Wild 20th Century
Studios

$24.8 $24.8 —

3.Birds of Prey Warner Bros. $7 $72.5 -59
4.Brahms: The Boy II STX
Entertainment

$5.9 $5.9 —

5.Bad Boys for Life Sony $5.9 $191.2 -49
*Friday,SaturdayandSunday Source:Comscore

tor and took a leading role in
the restructuring, which recov-
ered 80% for bondholders.
Investors are likely to recover
far less if Argentina and its mu-
nicipalities default as expected
this spring. Bonds of the sover-
eign and Buenos Aires trade at
between 40 and 50 cents on the
dollar, according to data from
MarketAxess.
The confrontation with Fidel-
ity took shape in January. Bue-
nos Aires was reluctant to spend
dwindling cash reserves just
weeks before its expected debt
restructuring alongside the fed-
eral government, the people fa-
miliar with the matter said. In
mid-January, about three weeks
ahead of the payment deadline,
Mr. Kicillof’s administration
asked bondholders to wait until
May to get paid.
Members of a bondholder
committee, includingGreylock
Capital Management,VR Capi-
tal GroupandWestern Asset
ManagementCo., suspected the
province would default before
then and refused, the people
said. The province reached a
deal with the group a few days
before the early February dead-
line, agreeing to pay 30% up-
front, but it still needed consent
from Fidelity as a holder of a
large chunk of the debt.
A new portfolio manager of
Fidelity’s largest emerging-mar-
kets bond fund, Jonathan Kelly,
wanted to send a message to the
province that Fidelity would bar-
gain aggressively in the bigger
restructuring to come, these
people said. It was Mr. Van Du-
zer’s job to deliver that message.
Mr. Van Duzer grew up in
Rochester, N.Y., and wrestled at
West Point before doing two

Continued from page B1

years of missionary work in
South Africa at the end of the
apartheid era. After serving in
the Army Corps of Engineers, he
studied law and became a bank-
ruptcy attorney, first at a white-
shoe firm, then for almost two
decades at Fidelity.
“He’s a fighter, it’s hard wired
into him,” said a person who
knows Mr. Van Duzer. His time
in South Africa proselytizing to
both Afrikaner and black com-
munities “helped him learn how
to deal with difficult issues,” the
person said.
Mr. Van Duzer parachutes in
when Fidelity’s big bond invest-
ments go bad, representing the
company in restructuring talks
with borrowers that default and
with other creditors., Recent as-
signments include bankrupt util-
ity PG&E Corp. and Brazilian
conglomerate Odebrecht SA.
He spends most Sundays
tending to Boston’s Mormon
community as a bishop for the
regional parish, or ward, the
person who knows him said.
Mr. Van Duzer has a reputa-
tion as a forthright and thought-
ful negotiator, equally capable of
forging consensus or going it
alone with a hard line. In the
case of Buenos Aires, he chose
the latter.
Fidelity thought Buenos Aires
had access to the money and be-
lieved it would be neglecting its
fiduciary duty if it went along
with the bondholder group, the
people familiar with the matter
said. Mr. Van Duzer told Mr.
Kicillof’s staff that Fidelity re-
quired 50% upfront, with
monthly installment payments
to follow, the people familiar
with the matter said.
No deal emerged, and mem-
bers of the bondholder group
were angry with the province’s
officials for risking an early de-
fault, according to these people.
Buenos Aires communicated
with Fidelity several times be-
fore and after launching its re-
structuring proposal, an official
for the province said. On Feb. 4,
Mr. Kicillof said the province
would make the payment.

A
Abel, Greg...................B1
Aniston, Jennifer........B3
B
Baldwin, Zacharia.......B9
Buffett, Warren..........B1
C
Cardona, Maria...........A4
Cox, Courteney............B3
D
Deal, Stan...................A1
Duzer, Nate Van.........B1
H
Hamers, Ralph..........B10
Hancock, Alexis..........R4

Hogan, Art..................B9
J
Jain, Ajit.....................B1
Jester, John................B4
K
Kelly, Jonathan...........B2
Khan, Iqbal................B10
Kudrow, Lisa...............B3
Kurian, Thomas...........B4
L
Larsen, Andreas Steno
B10
LeBlanc, Matt.............B3
Lucchesi, Ray..............R4
M

Meggyesi, Paul.........B10
Munger, Charlie..........B1
N
Naratil, Tom..............B10
O
Oxley, David..............B10
P
Perry, Matthew...........B3
S
Schneier, Bruce...........R4
Schultz, Greg..............A4
Schwimmer, David......B3
Stucki, Thomas.........B10
V
Vilfer, Don...................B9

Fidelity Is


Argentina


Nemesis


2013 ’15 ’20*

0

150

300

450

$600

Estimatedannualwinter
spendingbyanaverageU.S.
householdheatedprimarily
withnaturalgas

*2020 figure is a projection.
Note: Years refer to year winter ends; winter
covers period from Oct. 1 to March 31.
Source: Energy Information Administration

S&P Global Platts.
Foreign buyers committed
to long-term purchase agree-
ments of U.S. LNG are paying
almost twice as much as buy-
ers taking cargoes from the
spot market. In essence, they
are potentially losing $14 mil-
lion to $17 million per cargo
on some contracted ship-
ments, said Dumitru Dediu, a
partner at consulting firm
McKinsey & Co. Like others, he
believes the majority of export
terminals proposed in the U.S.
will never be built.
“We’re talking about 30 or
so projects, and I think only
two or three—at most, four—
are likely to go ahead,” Mr.
Dediu said.
With global commodities
traders such as Gunvor Group
and Trafigura Group playing a
growing role in the LNG mar-
ket, cheap prices for spot car-
goes are forcing U.S. LNG firms
to offer cheaper contracts.
In an effort to woo poten-
tial customers to 10-to-20-year
offtake agreements, some U.S.
companies have offered ul-
tralow fees for liquefying nat-
ural gas—as little as $1.75 per
million British thermal units,
according to two people famil-
iar with the matter. That price
is below the $2-per-unit capi-
tal cost of liquefying the gas
for some projects.
Tellurian’s Ms. Gentle re-
mains optimistic, noting that
demand for U.S. LNG has con-
tinued to grow.
“You’ll still need 75 million
tons from the other projects.
We really view it as, ‘All are
welcome,’” she said.
—Michael C. Bender
and Timothy Puko
contributed to this article.

that the average household be-
ing heated by natural gas would
spend $541 from October to
March—an 8% drop in winter
heating costs from a year ear-
lier. With temperatures across
much of the country milder
than expected and production
robust, U.S. inventories are well
above their levels from a year
earlier.
Plentiful natural gas has
dented profits for major pro-
ducers, however, and many an-
alysts expect prices to remain
low.
“We’re not banking on a re-
covery,”ChevronCorp. Chief
Executive Mike Wirth said on
the company’s January earn-
ings call. The energy giant
wrote down the value of its as-
sets by more than $10 billion in
December.
Still, consistently low fuel
prices have helped many con-
sumers. For Colin Giles, 27, who
lives near Detroit, low fuel ex-
penses help him maintain hob-
bies including playing hockey.
Limited heating costs for his
home and cheaper gasoline
have removed a possible source
of worry, he said.
“I like to drive,” said Mr.
Giles, who works as an auto-in-
dustry research analyst. “That’s
certainly influenced by the fact
that gas is not expensive.”

quarter of 2019 from a 3.2%
pace the prior quarter. Some
economists are hoping that a
reacceleration in consumer
spending can keep growth sta-
ble despite a drop in global de-
mand for goods and services
early in the year.
“It’s going to be a welcome
reprieve,” said Lindsey Piegza,
chief economist at Stifel Nico-
laus & Co. “This arguably
couldn’t come at a better time.”
The Energy Information Ad-
ministration recently projected

a Giant Eagle grocery store,
said he can’t remember the last
time gasoline exceeded $2.50 a
gallon.
Mr. Maier also often saves at
the pump with points from the
supermarket chain, and consis-
tently low natural-gas prices
have helped him budget costs
for heating his two-story town-
house.
Analyzing the economic im-
pact of cheap fuel is challeng-
ing, as costs vary widely across
the country because of a com-
bination of pipeline limitations,
state and local taxes and energy
companies’ pricing. The aver-
age retail gasoline price in Cali-
fornia, for example, is more
than $1 higher than the cost na-
tionally.
The recent rise of the U.S. to
become the world’s largest pro-
ducer of oil and natural gas
also makes the economic im-
pact murky because of the de-
pleted profits for energy com-
panies, fromExxon MobilCorp.
toDiamondback EnergyInc.
Shares of many of those com-
panies are down 20% or more
in the past year, while the S&P
500 has risen 20%.
But analysts say a prolonged
period of low fuel costs would
support consumers after their
spending slowed to a 1.8% an-
nual growth rate in the fourth

Affordable energy prices are
brightening Leonore Barfield’s
winter.
Gasoline has dropped about
50 cents a gallon from last year
near her home in the 6,000-
person town of Raton, N.M.—
lowering the cost of trips to
restaurants, movie theaters or
the closest Walmart, in neigh-
boring Colorado. And even
though cold weather has blan-
keted the area since October,
falling natural-gas prices have
helped the 63-year-old retiree
keep her three-bedroom home
comfortably warm.
“When I get my utility bill, I
don’t fall off my sofa,” she said.
Ms. Barfield’s satisfaction re-
flects a broader trend. Some of
thelowest prices for crude oil
and natural gas in years are
saving many Americans money.
The declining costs could help
cushion the U.S. from the eco-
nomic fallout related to the cor-
onavirus, which has disrupted
supply chains and threatened
global growth early in 2020.
But they also mark the latest
challenge for energy-producing
companies and regions, many
of which are struggling to cur-
tail output enough to stabilize
prices.
With analysts projecting am-
ple supplies of natural gas
ahead, futures prices earlier
this month fell to their lowest
level in almost four years.
They have since rebounded
to about $1.90 a million British
thermal units but remain down
roughly 30% in the past year,
benefiting the nearly half of
U.S. households that are heated
primarily with the fuel.
Meanwhile, with oil also fall-
ing, the average price of a regu-
lar gallon of gasoline recently
dropped below $2.40 to its low-
est point in a year, per price-
tracking firm GasBuddy. IHS
Markit Ltd.’s Oil Price Informa-
tion Service estimates that the
average U.S. household con-
sumes 100 gallons of gasoline a
month, so a 45-cent decline like
the one registered in the past
nine months would result in an-
nual savings of $540.
“You just don’t feel that
tightness,” said Brian Maier, 38
years old, who lives in Colum-
bus, Ohio.
Mr. Maier, the beer buyer for

BYAMRITHRAMKUMAR

Lower Fuel Prices Aid Consumers


More affordable natural gas has helped retiree Leonore Barfield heat her Raton, N.M., home this winter.

RAMSAY DE GIVE FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

LNG exporters, includingFree-
port LNG Development LP
andCheniere EnergyInc.
From 2016 through 2019,
U.S. suppliers reached 19 long-
term deals with foreign buy-
ers, covering 24 million tons of
LNG a year, S&P Global Platts
data show. That total excludes
a deal between Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Qatar that amounted
to a sharing agreement be-
tween production partners.
“The low-price environment
makes it very difficult to sign
long-term deals, and the market
is evolving into a more com-
moditized market,” said Robert
Fee, Cheniere’s vice president of
international affairs and com-
mercial development. “Yet
there is still a clear role for
long-term contracts. Some buy-
ers may see this as an opportu-
nity to lock in low prices.”
The Trump administration
has championed LNG export
deals in trade talks, with for-
mer Energy Secretary Rick
Perry and other officials tout-
ing the potential of “freedom
gas” and “molecules of free-
dom” to help Europe and Asia
reduce dependence on Russian
and Middle Eastern sources.
U.S. officials have aggres-
sively pursued LNG agree-
ments with countries includ-
ing China, India, Poland and
Ukraine. Thus far, however,
fewer concrete deals have
emerged since Mr. Trump took
office. Three out of four non-
binding LNG agreements the
Trump administration an-
nounced with China subse-
quently fell apart, and that
was before a U.S. trade war
with China disrupted Ameri-
can LNG flows to the country.
As he makes his first offi-
cial visit to India this week,
Mr. Trump will be joined by
Commerce Secretary Wilbur
Ross and Energy Secretary
Dan Brouillette, among other
officials, according to a senior
administration official. The
trip will focus on economic

Continued from page B1

Exporters of


Natural Gas


Struggle


Freeport LNG is planning to expand existing U.S. facilities.

FREEPORT

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Justin Gmelich


Randy Stuzin


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