麦肯锡:超过一半的上游并购损害了股东价值

麦肯锡公司的分析显示,在过去 12 年里,许多最大的上游石油和天然气交易对股东来说已经失去了价值。 

石油和天然气生产商经常寻求并购来为股东创造价值。但是,一份新报告发现,许多上游并购对投资者来说根本没有增值作用。

麦肯锡公司的分析发现,自2011年以来,在总金额超过10亿美元的71起上游油气交易中,一半以上的交易没有为股东创造价值。

然而,4 月 18 日的报告发现,过去 12 年上游勘探与生产交易中前四分之一的交易为股东带来了巨额回报。麦肯锡发现,前 25% 的交易在两年内为股东带来了 440 亿美元的超额回报。

麦肯锡在报告中表示,“有多个因素在起作用,例如交易前的调查、资产绩效的不确定性、石油和天然气价格的前景以及交易管理。” “但在所有情况下,创造差异化价值的能力是决定并购成功的关键因素,并可能决定下一个周期的赢家。”

麦肯锡发现,以大规模并购为目标的勘探与生产公司往往把重点放在降低一般管理费用这一“唾手可得的成果”上。

但是,寻求并购以实现更广泛的运营协同效应的公司通常会发现,与通过裁员和消除其他费用节省的一般管理费用相比,公司可以节省更多的成本。

麦肯锡在报告中表示:“除了一般行政费用外,上游公司还可以在收入和生产、运营成本和资本效率方面打开大门,利用合并作为‘及时时刻’来促进两个实体绩效的提高。” 。

沟通目标

麦肯锡表示,围绕生产、收入和其他指标规划更多的运营协同效应是一个良好的开端。让公众了解这些需求就更好了。

根据对跨行业 776 笔交易的分析,宣布成本协同效应预期可能与“长期显着优于同行”有关。两年后,宣布协同目标的公司的股东总回报率比未宣布协同目标的公司高出 7%。

该公司在报告中表示,“公开宣布目标有助于给高管和支持团队带来健康的压力,他们的薪酬将与实现目标挂钩。”


相关随着能源交易的升温,二叠纪盆地成为人们关注的焦点


现金推动的并购浪潮

麦肯锡及其他机构的专家预计,由于创纪录的现金流流入勘探生产行业,将引发新一波石油和天然气并购浪潮。

毕马威美国能源交易咨询和战略负责人迈克·哈林(Mike Harling)告诉哈特能源公司,为了加强资本纪律,上游运营商一直在利用其现金储备来偿还债务,并通过股票回购和股息提高股东价值。

但他表示,勘探与生产公司仍然希望投入大量现金。

“这创造了一个有利于并购的环境,”哈林说。

在下游 48 个州,西德克萨斯州和新墨西哥州的二叠纪盆地仍然是上游并购的竞争市场。

据报道,埃克森美孚已与二叠纪盆地纯粹参与者先锋自然资源公司就潜在的并购进行了讨论,因为这家石油和天然气巨头正在寻求更多的库存跑道。

本月早些时候, Ovintiv Inc. 同意通过价值 47.25 亿美元的现金加股票交易收购北米德兰盆地的三家 EnCap 支持的私营企业。

去年,Matador ResourcesDiamondback Energy还签署了价值超过 10 亿美元的协议,收购二叠纪盆地的私人勘探与生产项目。


相关报道Ovintiv 价值 42 亿美元的二叠纪交易后,页岩气并购机会萎缩


原文链接/hartenergy

McKinsey: Over Half of Upstream M&A Has Hurt Shareholder Value

During the past 12 years, many of the largest upstream oil and gas deals have lost value for shareholders, according to analysis by McKinsey & Co. 

Oil and gas producers often pursue M&A to create value for shareholders. But, a new report finds that a lot of upstream M&A is anything but accretive for investors.

Since 2011, out of the 71 upstream oil and gas transactions totaling more than $1 billion, an analysis by McKinsey & Co. found that more than half of the deals did not create value for shareholders.

However, the April 18 report found that the top quartile of upstream E&P deals over the past 12 years generated outsized returns for shareholders. The top 25% of deals generated $44 billion in excess shareholder returns over two years, McKinsey found.

“Multiple components are at play, such as pre-deal diligence, asset-performance uncertainties, outlooks for oil and gas prices and transaction management,” McKinsey said in its report. “But in all cases, the ability to accrue differentiated value creation is a key factor determining merger success and may determine the winners in the next cycle.”

All too often, E&P companies targeting large-scale M&A are focused on the “low-hanging fruit” of reducing G&A costs, McKinsey found.

But, companies pursuing M&A for broader operational synergies often see greater cost savings than G&A savings through headcount reductions and eliminating other expenses.

“Upstream companies can open the aperture across revenue and production, operating costs and capital efficiency in addition to G&A, using the merger as a “moment in time” to catalyze performance improvement across both entities,” McKinsey said in the report.

Communicate goals

Planning for more accretive operational synergies around production, revenue and other metrics is a good start, McKinsey said. Making those needs known to the public is even better.

Announcing cost-synergy expectations may be tied to “significant long-term outperformance over peers,” according to an analysis of 776 deals across sectors. Total shareholder returns for companies that did announce synergy targets outperformed those that didn’t by an incremental 7% after a median of two years.

“Publicly announcing targets can contribute to putting healthy pressure on the executives and support teams who will have their compensation linked to meeting targets,” the company said in the report.


RELATED: Permian in Spotlight as Energy Dealmaking Gathers Steam


Cash-fueled M&A wave

Experts at McKinsey and beyond are expecting a new wave of oil and gas M&A driven by an influx of record cash flow into the E&P sector.

Going for greater capital discipline, upstream operators have been using their cash stockpiles to pay down debt and boost shareholder value through stock buybacks and dividends, KPMG’s Mike Harling, U.S. energy deal advisory and strategy leader, told Hart Energy.

But there’s still a lot of cash out there that E&P companies are looking to put to work, he said.

“That sets up an environment that is favorable for M&A,” Harling said.

In the Lower 48, the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico continue to be a competitive market for upstream M&A.

Exxon Mobil has reportedly held discussions on potential M&A with Permian pure-player Pioneer Natural Resources as the oil and gas supermajor searches for more inventory runway.

Earlier this month, Ovintiv Inc. agreed to scoop up three EnCap-backed privates in the Northern Midland Basin in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $4.725 billion.

Within the past year, Matador Resources and Diamondback Energy also signed $1 billion-plus deals to acquire private E&Ps in the Permian.


RELATED: Shale M&A Opportunities Shrink After Ovintiv’s $4.2 Billion Permian Deal