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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Big Oil takes stage for post-austerity beauty contest

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With years of austerity in their rear-view mirrors, the world’s biggest oil companies are locked in a beauty contest to lure investors with promises of growth and greater rewards. Royal Dutch Shell and Total are emerging as frontrunners after a three-year slump thanks to strong growth projections but Exxon Mobil, the biggest publicly traded oil company, has largely disappointed with a weaker outlook.


Major oil companies slashed spending and cut costs after oil prices collapsed in 2014 and can now generate as much cash with crude at $50-$55 a barrel as they did when the price was around $100 earlier in the decade.


Cash flow at oil companies in 2017 rose to its highest since before the slump, helped by the drastic cost cutting plans and a recovery in oil prices, and executives are once again turning their attention to growth.


With crude expected to hold above $60 a barrel into the end of the decade, major oil companies are confident they can boost already attractive payouts to shareholders.


Total sent the strongest signal, announcing plans to increase dividends by 10 per cent, buy back $5 billion of shares by 2020 and abolish its so-called scrip policy introduced in the lean years of offering shares instead of cash dividends.


Analysts at Bernstein hailed the French company, which reported a 28 per cent rise in fourth-quarter profit, as “the new benchmark in shareholder returns” and upgraded their share recommendation to “outperform”.


“Clearly the US companies disappointed more whereas Total cheered everyone up together with Shell, even if it had a small miss,” said Alasdair McKinnon, portfolio manager at The Scottish Investment Trust.


Norway’s Statoil and US company Chevron Corp have also raised their dividends over the past week, while BP was ahead of the pack by resuming share buybacks in the fourth quarter of 2017.


Shell, whose profits and cash flow beat Exxon’s last year, is now set to buy $25 billion of shares by the end of the decade after abolishing its scrip policy in November.


Analysts say Exxon remains an outlier after a disappointing drop in cash flow and production in the fourth quarter raised concerns among investors about its strategy.


Shares of the Irving, Texas-based company have fallen by more than 10 per cent over the past week, wiping $35 billion off its value.


Its stock has trailed rivals significantly over the past two years, reflecting its weaker outlook.


“All the majors are cheap at the moment but maybe Exxon is not the best major out there. We prefer Shell,” McKinnon said.


Shell’s shares have outperformed rivals with total shareholder returns of 90 per cent over the past two years, said Simon Gergel, chief investment officer for UK equities at Allianz Global Investors. “We were encouraged by the cost cutting plans of the company and the potential transformation of its future cash flows,” he said.


After three years of finding ways to save money through job cuts, lower exploration budgets and harnessing new technology to become more efficient, executives have moved growth to the fore and are scrambling to outshine each other.


“The priority of the board is to maintain our ambitious growth and continue to add value for shareholders,” Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne told investors.


During a meeting with analysts last week, Shell Chief Executive Ben van Beurden and Chief Financial Officer Jessica Uhl said nine times that their goal was to make the Anglo-Dutch company a “world-class investment”.


The ambitious Dutch CEO has publicly said he wants Shell to challenge Exxon’s financial dominance in the sector, even though the US giant is still significantly larger than Shell by market value.


To reach that goal, Shell made by far the boldest move in the downturn, buying rival BG Group for $54 billion in 2016 and transforming the company into the world’s largest liquefied natural gas trader and a major oil producer in Brazil.— Reuters


Ron Bousso


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