勘探与生产公司向投资者发出的警报:自由现金流

专家小组在 Hart Energy 的 SUPER DUG 会议上表示,随着勘探与生产行业向投资者返还创纪录的利润,重新获得投资者的信任并获得现金的机会即将到来。

行业金融专家在 Hart Energy 的 SUPER DUG 会议上解决了关键的资本问题。座位从左到右:Hart Energy 高级执行编辑 Darren Barbee;瑞士信贷董事总经理蒂姆·佩里(Tim Perry);Muhammad Laghari,古根海姆证券公司高级董事总经理;David Deckelbaum,TD Cowen 董事总经理;以及 The Carnrite Group 首席执行官兼 Alvarez & Marsal 董事总经理 Al Carnrite。(来源:哈特能源)

得克萨斯州沃斯堡创纪录的市场表现、价值数十亿美元的股东回报和一贯的财政纪律正在合成一曲吸引多面投资者重返勘探与生产领域的海妖之歌。

“这个行业经历了 10 年的时间,如果我们回顾我们的业绩,我们不会自己投入资金,”Carnrite 集团首席执行官兼 Alvarez & 董事总经理 Al Carnrite 说道。元帅。

那是在所谓的“风潮”的早期,公司为了扩大自己的足迹和产量而迅速挥霍手头的现金并大量借贷。回报惨淡。股东们每个季度都要求回报,但他们的要求却被置若罔闻。

随着人们对 ESG 相关事物的情绪日益高涨,许多投资者放弃了该行业,并将资金转移到其他地方。当各种规模的公共勘探与生产公司的高管注意到这一点时,获得资本的渠道被关闭。公司逐渐开始回购股票并增加分配。包括先锋自然资源公司、德文能源公司和康菲石油公司在内的一些公司在其股东回报策略中重新引入了可变股息。

现在该行业拥有充足的自由现金流(FCF),并且在某些季度将大部分现金流返还给投资者,问题是投资者和资本市场对勘探与生产的开放程度如何。  

“我认为我们所处的环境只会在吸引资本方面变得更好,无论是私人资本还是公共资本,”卡恩里特上个月在哈特能源公司的 SUPER DUG 演讲中告诉观众,“雄鹿队:金钱小组。”

“但这需要时间,”他说。“如果我是长期投资者,我会说,‘K,你会遵守这个纪律吗?’”

 “超级”牛市

古根海姆证券公司高级董事总经理穆罕默德·拉加里表示,当油价上涨时,投资也会上涨,这会增加成本。

“这是一个非常简单的方程式,”他说。

然而,尽管油价上涨(尽管今年已趋于稳定),且主要基于通胀的成本有所增长,但勘探与生产投资近年来仍持平。

瑞士信贷 (Credit Suisse) 董事总经理蒂姆·佩里 (Tim Perry) 表示,该行业的资本支出比五年前下降了约 33%。在某些情况下,美国生产商已将产量指导从两位数降至零。

他说,与此同时,世界各地的需求动态正在不断变化。

佩里说,由于减少碳排放的愿望引起了公众的兴趣,美国的人均需求已从 27 桶/人下降到 20 桶。

但在拥有14.3亿人口、是美国人口四倍的中国,却出现了相反的消费趋势。人均石油消费量从不足1桶/人增加到4桶/人。

Carnrite表示,如果资本支出继续减少,或者趋于平缓,而中国、印度和整个亚洲的人口消耗更多的石油,长期供需动态可能会发生变化。

他表示:“不难看出,如果没有出现需求破坏事件,我们将处于某种原油‘超级’牛市。” “所以我认为我们正处于一个供应无法跟上的环境中。”

“不难看出,如果没有出现需求
破坏Carnrite 集团和 Alvarez & Marsal 董事总经理

“回报解决一切”

TD Cowen 董事总经理 David Deckelbaum 表示,企业支出的一个关键指标是并购,今年的交易量比去年下降了 33%。

相反,他们利用巨额利润向股东大量现金。2022年,西方顶级石油公司向投资者支付了创纪录的1100亿美元股息和股票回购。

2008 年至 2009 年间,根据标准普尔 500 指数衡量,该行业的业绩记录惨淡,回报率为 1%,但交易量却高达 13%。FCF 普遍处于亏损状态。

佩里表示,在疫情期间,该行业在标准普尔指数中的占比下降至 2%,但此后已反弹至 5% 左右。

与此同时,运营商对自由现金流的关注现在使勘探与生产行业位居指数榜首,其收益接近 20%,而总指数仅为 5%。

“这是标准普尔 500 指数中表现最差的行业,但却成为表现最好的行业,”他说。

但 E&P 股价仍然很低,这使得回购股票变得更加实惠。

德克尔鲍姆表示,勘探与生产公司必须决定是应该趁股价便宜时购买股票,进一步激励投资者,还是达成交易以实现增长。

与此同时,专家小组成员表示,该行业获得资本的渠道终于在某种程度上放松了。

“我认为资本市场根本没有关闭,但它们的成本比应有的要高,”佩里说。

古根海姆证券公司高级董事总经理穆罕默德·拉加里 (Muhammad Laghari) 表示,他看到私募股权公司产生了新的兴趣。

“我们确实预计会有不少人筹集资金,”他说。

德克尔鲍姆表示,私募股权融资将超过近年来筹集的资金。参与者可能较少,但其中一些人对这个领域产生了新的兴趣,例如家族办公室和国际参与者。他说,“获得你想要的(筹款)规模的可能性比近年来更大”。

金融框架已经发生变化,但小组成员表示,通过创纪录的现金流和巨额股东回报实现的勘探与生产价值主张为私募股权和公共投资者的投资提供了强有力的理由。

“我认为它是开放的,”卡恩里特说。“回报能解决一切。”

原文链接/hartenergy

E&Ps’ Siren Song to Investors: Free Cash Flow

Regaining investor trust–and access to their cash–is on the horizon as the E&P sector returns record profits to investors, a panel of experts said during Hart Energy’s SUPER DUG conference.

Industry finance experts addressed key capital concerns during Hart Energy’s SUPER DUG conference. Seated from left to right: Darren Barbee, senior managing editor at Hart Energy; Tim Perry, managing director at Credit Suisse; Muhammad Laghari, senior managing director at Guggenheim Securities; David Deckelbaum, managing director of TD Cowen; and Al Carnrite, CEO of The Carnrite Group and managing director of Alvarez & Marsal. (Source: Hart Energy)

FORT WORTH, Texas—Record market performance, billions of dollars’ worth of shareholder returns and consistent fiscal discipline are synthesizing into a siren’s song luring generalist investors back to the E&P space.

“This industry went through a 10-year period that we wouldn’t [have] put our own money into it if we look back on our performance,” said Al Carnrite, CEO of The Carnrite Group and managing director of Alvarez & Marsal.

That was during the early days of the so-called ‘shale gale’ when companies spent fast and loose with any cash on hand to and borrowed prodigiously to grow their footprint and their production. Returns were dismal. Shareholders called for returns quarter-after-quarter, but their demands fell on deaf ears.

Amid increasing sentiment on all things ESG-related, many investors gave up on the sector and took their cash elsewhere. Access to capital closed, and that’s when the C-suite at public E&Ps of all sizes took notice. Incrementally, companies started buying back shares and increasing distributions. A few, including Pioneer Natural Resources, Devon Energy and ConocoPhillips reintroduced a variable dividend to their shareholder returns strategy.

Now that sector is flush with free cash flow (FCF) and, in some quarters, returning most of it to their investors, the question is how open investors and the capital markets will be to E&Ps.  

“I think we're in an environment where it's only going to get better as far as attracting capital, whether that be private or public capital,” Carnrite told an audience last month at Hart Energy’s SUPER DUG presentation, ‘Big Bucks: The Money Panel.’

“But it's going to take time,” he said. “If I'm a long-term investor, I'm saying, ‘OK, are you going to keep that discipline?”

 ‘Super’ bull market

When oil prices increase, investment should, too, and that increases costs, said Muhammad Laghari, senior managing director at Guggenheim Securities.

“It’s a pretty simple equation,” he said.

But while oil prices increased–although they have stabilized this year–and costs based largely on inflation grew, E&P investment remains flat in recent years.

The sector’s capital spending is down roughly 33% from five years ago, said Tim Perry, managing director at Credit Suisse. U.S. producers have dropped their production guidance from double-digits to zero in some instances.

Meanwhile, demand dynamics around the world are in flux, he said.

Per capita demand in the U.S. has dropped from 27 bbl/person to 20 bbl as a desire to cut carbon has captured the interest of the general public, Perry said.

But in China, where the 1.43 billion population is quadruple that of the U.S., the opposite consumption trend is happening. Per capita oil consumption has increased from less than 1 bbl/person to 4 bbl/person.

If capital spending continues to diminish–or if it flattens–while the population in China, India and throughout Asia consumes more oil, the long-term supply/demand dynamic is likely to shift, Carnrite said.

“It’s not hard to draw a line that says we’re going to be at some kind of ‘super’ bull market for crude oil, absent a demand destruction event,” he said. “So I think we’re in an environment where supply is not going to be able to keep up.”

“It’s not hard to draw a line that says we’re going to be at some kind of ‘super’ bull market for crude oil, absent a demand destruction event.”
—Al Carnrite, CEO of The Carnrite Group and managing director of Alvarez & Marsal

‘Returns solve everything’

A key indicator of corporate spending is M&A, and deal flow this year is down 33% by value from last year, said David Deckelbaum, managing director at TD Cowen.

Instead, they are using blockbuster profits to shower shareholders with cash. The top Western oil companies paid out a record $110 billion in dividends and share repurchases to investors in 2022.

Between 2008 and 2009, the industry had a dismal track record as measured by the S&P 500, where it offered a 1% return while accounting for up to 13% of trading. FCF was generally in the red.

During the pandemic, the industry’s representation on the S&P fell to 2%, but has since rebounded to roughly 5%, Perry said.

At the same time, operators’ focus on FCF now puts the E&P sector at the top of the index, generating close to 20% compared to the total index’s 5%.

“It was the worst performing industry on the S&P 500 to [become] the best performing,” he said.

But E&P shares prices remain low, which makes buying back shares more affordable.

Deckelbaum said E&Ps have to decide whether they should buy the shares while they are cheap, further incentivizing investors, or make a deal to grow.

Meanwhile, the industry’s access to capital is finally loosening–to some extent, the panelists said.

"I don't think the capital markets are closed at all, but they're more expensive than they should be," Perry said.

Muhammad Laghari, senior managing director, Guggenheim Securities, said he is seeing new interest from private equity.

“We do expect quite a few folks to raise money,” he said.

Private equity funding will exceed the raises generated in recent years, Deckelbaum said. There may be fewer players, but some of them are newly interested in the space, such as family offices and international players. "The odds of getting the size (of fundraise) that you want are greater" than in recent years, he said.

Financial frameworks have changed, but the panelists said the E&P value proposition via record cash flow and blockbuster shareholder returns makes a strong case for investment by both private equity and public investors.

“I think it’s wide open,” Carnrite said. “But returns solve everything.”