SLB、贝克休斯、哈里伯顿为中东繁荣做好​​准备

中东的一系列项目有望为 SLB、贝克休斯和哈里伯顿带来未来收入的繁荣。

三大油田服务公司乘着全球钻井活动增加的浪潮,在第一季度实现了惊人的收入增长。根据公司的指导,今年将会有更多的事情发生。

SLB (30%)、贝克休斯 (19%) 和哈里伯顿 (33%) 的季度同比增长反映了全球地区的实力,特别是在离岸领域。不过,如果有一个地区值得关注,那就是中东。

哈里伯顿董事长、总裁兼首席执行官杰夫·米勒在公司财报电话会议上对分析师表示:“我仍认为中东地区的活动在早期有所增加。” “我对我们的成长感到满意。” 钻机数量不一定接近峰值,我认为我们有很多机会继续运行。”

每个人都在奔跑:哈里伯顿的中东/亚洲收入在本季度同比增长了 30%,贝克休斯在该地区的收入增长了 23%,SLB 的收入增长了 18%。但推动高管信心的是前景。

SLB、BH、哈里伯顿第一季度收入
SLB、贝克休斯和哈里伯顿按地区划分的第一季度收入份额。(来源:SLB、贝克休斯和哈里伯顿)

SLB 首席执行官 Olivier Le Peuch 在其公司期间表示,“中东的活动强度,即短周期和长周期开发项目的结合,这种组合是独一无二的” ”的财报电话会议。

“在中东,有史以来最大的投资周期现已开始,”他说。“这将支持未来四年正在进行的石油和天然气产能扩张项目。因此,今年我们预计将在中东地区实现有史以来最高的收入,从而使我们走上实现多年增长目标的轨道。”

Rystad Energy分析师在4月26日的报告中指出,由于产能限制,该地区对油田服务的巨大需求推高了供应链价格。

“在沙特阿拉伯、卡塔尔和阿联酋大型项目的推动下,今年中东地区的海上上游行业已经超过所有其他地区,”雷斯塔表示。“到 2023 年,中东的离岸投资预计将达到约 330 亿美元,几乎是两年前 170 亿美元的两倍。”

Evercore ISI 同意 Rystad 的评估。

Evercore表示:“我们最近重申了我们对油田服务、设备和钻井空间的看涨立场,因为我们仍然相信,我们正处于勘探与生产支出长期而强劲的上升周期的早期阶段,特别是在中东和广泛的近海地区。”在一份报告中。

北美市场疲软

总体而言,三大巨头公布的第一季度业绩数据令分析师满意。贝克休斯尤其赢得了掌声。

“这是我们和[华尔街]一直在等待的季度和前景,第二季度的业绩指引高于华尔街的预期,”派珀·桑德勒(Piper Sandler)在报告中夸口道。

7.82 亿美元的 EBITDA 超出了 7.3 亿美元的普遍预期,每股收益 0.28 美元超出了 0.26 美元的普遍预期。第二季度 EBITDA 指导值为 8.45 亿至 9.05 亿美元,而市场普遍预期为 8.59 亿美元。

Piper Sandler 指出,尽管北美市场与最初预期相比有所疲软,但贝克休斯油田服务和设备部门仍取得了进展。分析师表示,他们相信该公司到 2025 年可以实现 20% 的 EBITDA 利润率目标。

贝克休斯董事长兼首席执行官洛伦佐·西蒙内利 (Lorenzo Simonelli) 对分析师表示:“预计这一宏观背景仍将支持 2023 年全球上游支出实现两位数增长,多个国际项目正在执行,海上开发管道不断增长。” “我们仍然相信当前的环境仍然是独特的,与之前的周期相比,支出周期更加持久,对大宗商品价格波动的敏感度较低。”

SLB 的前景也很强劲,该季度 EBITDA 为 17.9 亿美元,超出预期的 17.4 亿美元,收益从 2022 年第一季度的每股 0.36 美元飙升至每股 0.65 美元。

Piper Sandler 表示,“随着北半球的季节性复苏、中东处于不同阶段的产能扩张项目以及亚洲和撒哈拉以南非洲地区的强劲活动,预计第二季度将出现强劲增长”写道。“这种增长情景为各部门和地区的利润率连续大幅扩张提供了支持。”

哈里伯顿也超出了财务预期,每股收益为 0.72 美元,而分析师普遍预期为 0.65 美元/股。竣工和生产部门一马当先,带来了 34 亿美元的收入。

哈里伯顿公司的米勒指出,多年来石油和天然气领域的结构性投资不足是该行业复苏的原因。客户需求的增加和服务市场的紧张将推动今年和未来的支出增长。

“预计大部分投资将用于开发活动,这对哈里伯顿来说是件好事,因为它推动了对我们产品和服务的巨大需求,”他说。“我从客户那里听到的以及在世界石油和天然气市场上看到的情况证实了我对这一升级周期的看法。哈里伯顿今年和长期的前景都很强劲。”

雷斯塔没有提出任何异议。

“由于能源安全是大多数国家的首要任务,而且供应链在许多方面仍然受到产能限制,Rystad Energy 认为,OFS(油田服务)参与者提高财务业绩所需的市场基础在今年剩余时间内将保持强劲,” ”分析师写道。“这与我们之前的分析一致,强调了 2023 年整个 OFS 行业预计的收入增长潜力和利润率改善趋势。”  

原文链接/hartenergy

SLB, Baker Hughes, Halliburton Primed for Middle East Boom

A bevy of projects in the Middle East promises a boom in future revenues for SLB, Baker Hughes and Halliburton.

The three biggest oilfield service companies rode waves of increased global drilling activity to post stunning revenue gains in the first quarter. Based on the companies’ guidance, there will be a lot more to come this year.

The year-over-year (yoy) quarterly gains for SLB (30%), Baker Hughes (19%) and Halliburton (33%) reflect strength across global regions, particularly in offshore segments. If there is a region to keep an eye on, though, it’s the Middle East.

“I would still argue early innings of activity increase in the Middle East,” Jeff Miller, Halliburton’s chairman, president and CEO, told analysts during the company’s earnings call. “I’m pleased with our growth. Rig counts aren’t necessarily at near peak, and I think we’ve got a lot of opportunity to continue to run.”

And everybody’s running: Halliburton’s Middle East/Asia revenues jumped 30% in the quarter yoy, Baker Hughes saw a 23% increase in the region and SLB’s revenues rose 18%. But it’s the outlook that drives the top executives’ confidence.

Q1 Revenue for SLB, BH, Halliburton
Share of first-quarter revenue broken down by region for SLB, Baker Hughes and Halliburton. (Source: SLB, Baker Hughes and Halliburton)

“The intensity of activity in [the] Middle East—that is, a mix of short-cycle and long-cycle development projects—this combination is unique,” said Olivier Le Peuch, CEO of SLB, during his company’s earnings call.

“In the Middle East, the largest-ever investment cycle has now commenced,” he said. “This will support ongoing capacity expansion projects over the next four years, in both oil and gas. Consequently, this year we expect to post our highest revenue ever in the Middle East, putting us on track to achieve our multi-year growth aspirations.”

Rystad Energy analysts noted in an April 26 report that huge demand for oilfield services in the region has boosted prices in the supply chain due to capacity constraints.

“The Middle East is already set to exceed all the other regions this year in terms of the offshore upstream sector, driven by massive projects in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE,” Rystad said. “Around $33 billion is set to go on offshore investments in the Middle East in 2023, a near doubling of the $17 billion seen just two years ago.”

Evercore ISI agreed with Rystad’s assessment.

“We recently reiterated our bullish stance on the oilfield services, equipment & drilling space as we remain convinced we are in the early stages of a long and strong upcycle for E&P spending, especially in the Middle East and broadly offshore,” Evercore said in a report.

Softening North America

In general, the big three reported analyst-pleasing numbers for first-quarter performance. Baker Hughes, in particular, garnered applause.

“This was the quarter and outlook we and… [Wall] Street had been waiting on, with a beat and a second-quarter guide above the Street estimates,” Piper Sandler bubbled in its report.

EBITDA of $782 million beat consensus expectations of $730 million and earnings of $0.28/share beat the consensus forecast of $0.26/share. Second-quarter EBITDA guidance of $845 million to $905 million contrasted with consensus estimates of $859 million.

Piper Sandler noted progress in Baker Hughes’ oilfield services and equipment segment, despite softening in the North American market compared to initial expectations. The analysts said they believe the company can hit its 20% EBITDA margin target by 2025.

“We expect this macro backdrop to still support a double-digit increase in global upstream spending in 2023 with multiple international projects being executed and the offshore development pipeline growing,” Baker Hughes Chairman and CEO Lorenzo Simonelli told analysts. “We continue to believe current environment remains unique with a spending cycle that is more durable and less sensitive to commodity price swings relative to prior cycles.”

SLB’s outlook is also strong, following a quarter in which its EBITDA of $1.79 billion beat expectations of $1.74 billion and earnings soared to $0.65/share from $0.36/share in first-quarter 2022.

The second quarter “is expected to see strong growth with seasonal recovery in the Northern Hemisphere, capacity expansion projects in the Middle East that are in various stages of ramp-up and robust activity in Asia and Sub-Sahara Africa,” Piper Sandler wrote. “This growth scenario provides support for broad sequential margin expansion across the Divisions and geographies.”

Halliburton beat financial expectations as well, with earnings of $0.72/share compared to the analyst consensus expectation of $0.65/share. The completion and production segment led the way, bringing in $3.4 billion in revenue.

Halliburton’s Miller cited many years of structural underinvestment in oil and gas as cause for the sector’s resurgence. Elevated customer demand and a tight services market will push growth in spending this year and in the future.

“We expect much of this investment will be directed towards development activity, which is great for Halliburton as it drives outsized demand for our products and services,” he said. “My view of this upcycle is confirmed by what I hear from our customers and see in the world’s oil and gas markets. The Halliburton outlook for both the current year and the long term is strong.”

No argument from Rystad.

“With energy security being a priority for most countries and supply chains remaining capacity constrained on many fronts, Rystad Energy believes market fundaments necessary for OFS  [oilfield services] players to boost their financial performance will remain strong for the rest of the year,” the analysts wrote. “This aligns with our previous analysis highlighting the revenue growth potential and margin improvement trend expected for the OFS sector as a whole in 2023.”