哈里伯顿公布 2023 年运营利润率较高

哈里伯顿首席执行官杰夫米勒表示,服务强度有助于油田服务基础持续强劲。

哈里伯顿在 2023 年实现了最高的营业利润率,并预计 2024 年将是增长的一年。

在讨论第四季度和 2023 年全年业绩的投资者电话会议上,首席执行官杰夫·米勒 (Jeff Miller) 表示,完井和生产以及钻井和评估部门实现了十多年来的最高营业利润率。

哈里伯顿执行副总裁兼首席财务官埃里克·卡雷 (Eric Carre) 称 2023 年对该公司来说是强劲的一年。

“多项财务和运营指标显示出近期记忆中最好的业务绩效,”卡雷说。

Miller 将公司的成功部分归功于客户采用 Zeus 电动压裂 (e-frac) 解决方案,并引用了 Zeus 效率的一个例子。

“当我们从拉链式压裂到同步压裂(同时压裂),再到本例中的三井压裂(三口井的同时压裂)时,这并不是马力需求的一对一增加,因此,随着产量的增加,我们的效率会变得更高,”他说。

他指出,随着压裂变得越来越大,精度变得更加重要。

“就 Trimul 压裂而言,这是一项真正具有开创性的工作,与这位客户合作非常兴奋,”他说。

压裂船队前景

米勒表示,Zeus 技术的市场吸引力一直很强劲。 

他说:“目前在现场工作的 Zeus 船队和合同于 2024 年交付的 Zeus 船队合计占我们压裂船队的 40% 以上。” “我预计到 2025 年,我们一半以上的车队将是电动的。”

他表示,Zeus 今年的交付是替换现有机队,而不是增加增量机队容量。

杰夫·米勒
“产量是服务强度的函数,所以,简单地说,更多的沙子,更多的桶。”哈里伯顿董事长、总裁兼首席执行官埃夫米勒。(来源:哈里伯顿)

 “这创造了一个稳定的环境,因此钻机数量会四处移动并做它该做的事情,但我们最大的业务部分非常稳定,”米勒说。

此外,他预计 2025 年北美市场的表现将与 2024 年类似,尽管钻机数量较多。

“我确实相信我们已经达到了 DUC 被削减的地步,”他说。“它们很大程度上被缩减了,我认为我们会看到钻机数量增加,只是因为它提供了运行非常平稳稳定的业务所需的 DUC 库存。” 

哈里伯顿表示,它不打算在现货市场开展业务,米勒称现货市场“有点混战”。 

“这确实是市场双方的输赢,”米勒说。“当市场变得紧张时,当市场走向另一个方向时,运营商可能会遭受损失。服务损失很大,我们的策略是远离这种情况。”

他说,重点更多地放在长期游戏上。 

“我会说,在我们想要参与的市场中,这是技术驱动的、最低的总拥有成本,并且致力于我认为最重要的事情,即每英尺的生产率,这是一个不同的游戏,”他说。

2023 数字

哈里伯顿公布的 2023 年第四季度净利润为 6.61 亿美元,总收入为 57 亿美元,而 2022 年第四季度净利润为 6.56 亿美元,总收入为 56 亿美元,2023 年第三季度净利润为 7.16 亿美元,总收入为 58 亿美元。

2023 年,哈里伯顿的净利润为 26 亿美元,营收为 230 亿美元,而 2022 年净利润为 16 亿美元,营收为 203 亿美元。

2023年第四季度,哈里伯顿从运营中产生了14亿美元的现金、11亿美元的自由现金流(FCF),并回购了约2.5亿美元的普通股和1.5亿美元的债务。 

该公司在这一年中产生了约 23 亿美元的自由现金流,偿还了约 3 亿美元的债务,并通过股票回购和股息向股东返还了 14 亿美元的现金。

该公司还将股息提高至每股 0.17 美元。

卡雷表示,2024 年自由现金流将会更高。

“预计自由现金流将比 23 世纪至少增长 10%,”他说。“这”将得益于收入的提高。这也将得益于营运资金效率的提高。”

2024 年及以后

米勒表示,油田服务的基本面依然强劲,原因有二。

“首先,我们发现我们运营的任何地方的服务强度都在增加,无论是北美较长的支管、成熟油田中较小且更复杂的油藏还是近海深水,客户需要更多而不是更少的服务来开发他们的资源,” ”他说。 

哈里伯顿的服务强度在 2023 年上半年达到峰值。 

“产量是服务强度的函数,因此,简单地说,更多的沙子,更多的桶,”米勒说。但他补充说,下降率是一个因素。

“当我们观察它的发展时,问题是需要泵入多少增量沙子来克服显然会随之而来的下降率。”快速添加桶,显然它们会迅速脱落,“他说。

他表示,油田服务基本面保持强劲的第二个原因是,全球经济的长期扩张将对各种形式的能源产生巨大的需求。 

“我预计石油和天然气仍然是全球能源结构的重要组成部分,未来需求将持续增长,”他表示。

米勒表示,他预计 2024 年国际勘探与生产支出将以低两位数增长,并预计活动将持续多年增长。他表示,到 2024 年,大部分活动将来自中东和亚洲地区,而到 2025 年,非洲和欧洲的增长可能会高于平均水平。

“到 2025 年以后,我们看到活跃的招标渠道,工作范围延伸到本世纪末,这让我对这个多年升级周期的持续时间充满信心,”他说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Halliburton Posts High Operating Margins for 2023

Halliburton’s CEO Jeff Miller says service intensity contributes to ongoing strong oilfield service fundamentals.

Halliburton delivered its highest operating margins in 2023 and expects 2024 to be a year of growth.

During an investor call discussing the fourth quarter and full year 2023 results, CEO Jeff Miller said the completions and production and the drilling and evaluation divisions achieved their highest operating margins in over a decade.

Eric Carre, Halliburton’s executive vice president and CFO, called 2023 a strong year for the company.

“Multiple financial and operational metrics showed the best business performance in recent memory,” Carre said.

Miller attributed part of the company’s success to customer adoption of its Zeus electric-fracturing (e-frac) solution, citing an example of Zeus’ efficiency.

“As we go from zipper frac to simul-frac (simultaneous frac) to, in this case, a trimul frac (simultaneous frac of three wells) with a customer, that is not a one-to-one increase in horsepower requirements, so we become more efficient as those volumes go up,” he said.

He noted that as fracs get larger, precision becomes more important.

“In the case of the trimul frac, really groundbreaking type work, super excited to do it with this customer,” he said.

Frac fleet outlook

Miller said the market pull for the Zeus technology has been strong. 

“The combination of Zeus fleets working in the field today and Zeus fleets contracted for 2024 delivery represent over 40% of our fracturing fleet,” he said. “I expect well over half of our fleets will be electric in 2025.”

He said Zeus deliveries this year are replacing existing fleets rather than adding incremental fleet capacity.

Jeff Miller
“Production’s a function of service intensity, so, simply put, more sand, more barrels.” —Jeff Miller, chairman, president and CEO of Halliburton. (Source: Halliburton)

 “That creates a steady environment, so the rig count's going to move around and do what it does, but our largest part of our business is very stable,” Miller said.

Further, he expects the North American market in 2025 to perform similarly to 2024 in spite of the rig count.

“I do believe we've reached a point where DUCs are drawn down,” he said. “They’re largely drawn down, and I think that we’ll see rig count increase only because it’s supplying the inventory of DUCs required to run a very smooth stable type of business.” 

Halliburton says it isn’t looking to work in the spot market, with Miller calling the spot market “a bit of a free-for-all.” 

“It’s a win-lose on either side of the market, really,” Miller said. “When the market’s getting tight, probably operators are losing when it’s going the other direction. Service loses a lot and our strategy is to stay out of that.”

The focus is more on the long-term game, he said. 

“I would say in the market where we want to play, which is technology driven, lowest total cost of ownership and working on what I think is most important, which is productivity per foot, that’s a different game,” he said.

2023 numbers

Halliburton reported fourth quarter 2023 net income of $661 million on total revenues of $5.7 billion, compared to fourth quarter 2022 net income of $656 million on total revenues of $5.6 billion and third quarter 2023 net income of $716 million on revenues of $5.8 billion.

For 2023, Halliburton posted net income of $2.6 billion on revenues of $23 billion, compared to net income of $1.6 billion on revenues of $20.3 billion in 2022.

During the fourth quarter of 2023, Halliburton generated $1.4 billion of cash from operations, $1.1 billion of free cash flow (FCF) and repurchased approximately $250 million of common stock and $150 million of debt. 

The company generated about $2.3 billion of FCF during the year, retired about $300 million of debt and returned $1.4 billion of cash to shareholders through stock repurchases and dividends.

The company also increased its dividend to $0.17 per share.

Carre said 2024 FCF will be higher.

“We’re expecting the free cash flow to be at least 10% over ’23,” he said. “That’s going to be on the back of improved income. It’s going to be on the back also of improved efficiencies around working capital.”

2024 and beyond

Miller said fundamentals for oilfield services remain strong for two reasons.

“First, we see an increase in service intensity everywhere we operate, whether it’s longer laterals in North America, smaller and more complex reservoirs in mature fields or offshore deepwater, customers require more services to develop their resources, not fewer,” he said. 

Halliburton saw peak levels of service intensity in the first half of 2023. 

“Production’s a function of service intensity, so, simply put, more sand, more barrels,” Miller said. But he added that decline rates are a factor.

“As we watch it unfold, it'll be a matter of how much incremental sand gets pumped to overcome what is clearly going to be a decline rate that comes with—we add barrels rapidly, obviously they fall off rapidly,” he said.

He said the second reason oilfield services fundamentals remain strong is that the long-term expansion of the global economy will create enormous demands on all forms of energy. 

“I expect oil and gas remains a critical component of the global energy mix with demand growth well into the future,” he said.

Miller said he expects international E&P spending to grow in the low double digits in 2024 and projects multiple years of sustained activity growth. Much of that activity will come from the Middle East and Asia region in 2024, and in 2025 Africa and Europe will likely show above average growth, he said.

“Beyond 2025, we see an active tender pipeline with work scopes extending through the end of the decade, which gives me confidence in the duration of this multi-year upcycle,” he said.