赫斯圭亚那的价值是埃克森美孚争端的核心

版权所有 Christophe/AdobeStock
版权所有 Christophe/AdobeStock

知情人士称,仲裁小组将对埃克森美孚和雪佛龙之间备受瞩目的冲突进行裁决,并深入调查赫斯在圭亚那的石油财富的秘密价值

去年 10 月,雪佛龙提出以 530 亿美元收购赫斯,这是几十年来石油行业最大规模整合浪潮中最大的两笔交易之一。雪佛龙在此次收购中最觊觎的资产是赫斯在美国最大竞争对手埃克森美孚运营的圭亚那油田的股份。

埃克森美孚和中国海洋石油总公司对这笔交易提出质疑,声称根据合同,他们拥有优先购买赫斯在该油田股份的权利,此事将由三人仲裁小组决定。让仲裁小组考虑评估价值是埃克森美孚声称这笔交易是以合并为幌子的资产收购的核心。知情人士说,埃克森美孚认为圭亚那资产非常有价值,合并将引发控制权变更,并赋予埃克森美孚和中海油对资产出售的优先购买权。

另一方面,雪佛龙和赫斯并不认为圭亚那的估值会对仲裁小组对合同仲裁的看法产生任何影响。了解他们想法的人士表示,他们的立场是埃克森美孚的权利不适用,因为赫斯对其圭亚那子公司的控制权没有变化。贸易组织国际能源谈判者协会 (AIEN) 副总裁兼文森与埃尔金斯律师事务所合伙人克里斯托弗·斯特朗 (Christopher B. Strong) 表示,在控制权变更纠纷中,估值可能是一个关键而漫长的 步骤,文森与埃尔金斯律师事务所曾为埃克森美孚工作。

此次竞标的奖品是赫斯在圭亚那斯塔布鲁克海上合资企业中 30% 的股份,该合资企业迄今已发现约 116 亿桶石油和天然气。该财团包括埃克森美孚(持股 45%)和中海油(持股 25%),负责圭亚那的所有石油生产,去年通过开采 1.37 亿桶石油赚取了 63.3 亿美元的利润。预计到 2027 年,这一产量将增加两倍以上。

埃克森美孚首席执行官达伦·伍兹 今年早些时候告诉路透社,他将考虑对赫斯圭亚那的全部或部分股份提出反竞价,但前提是仲裁小组接受其对优先权的主张,并确定价格。知情人士本月表示,伍兹的立场保持不变。华尔街分析师估计,赫斯圭亚那的股份占雪佛龙 530 亿美元竞标价的约 70%。

版权所有 atdr/AdobeStock

绝不妥协

该案的关键在于赫斯圭亚那公司的控制权是否会发生变更。两家公司表示,交易的结构使得赫斯将保持完整并成为雪佛龙的子公司。“埃克森美孚和中海油继续无视运营协议的明确措辞,雪佛龙和赫斯仍然相信仲裁将确认斯塔布鲁克 ROFR(优先购买权)不适用于合并,”两家公司在回答路透社的问题时表示。

雪佛龙首席执行官迈克尔·沃思最近否认了与埃克森美孚和中海油达成任何妥协的可能性。这两家公司今年早些时候曾举行过谈判,但埃克森美孚提起仲裁后谈判中断。

沃思 8 月 2 日表示:“看起来(妥协)并不是这件事最终的结果。”

然而,如果委员会接受优先购买权的适用,Hess 表示不会将其在圭亚那的股份出售给埃克森美孚或中海油。首席执行官约翰·赫斯今年早些时候表示,如果雪佛龙交易被取消,Hess 将保持独立。

雪佛龙面临压力

雪佛龙可能需要圭亚那的提振。过去六个季度,该公司的利润同比下降。过去 52 周,其股价下跌了 8.7%,而竞争对手埃克森美孚的股价则上涨了 7.7%。5 月,埃克森美孚以 600 亿美元收购了美国最大的页岩油生产商先锋自然资源公司,这是最新一轮整合浪潮中最大的收购案。这笔交易帮助埃克森美孚在第二季度实现了 92.4 亿美元的收益,是雪佛龙同期利润的两倍多。

石油分析师保罗·桑基表示:“埃克森美孚目前处于我 20 至 25 年来的最佳状态。它已经取得了非凡的成就。”

与此同时,雪佛龙的首席执行官正在重组公司,更换副手,并将公司总部从加利福尼亚迁至德克萨斯州。在赫斯交易完成后,沃思还计划通过出售资产筹集高达 150 亿美元。他原本希望在 2024 年上半年完成交易,但交易延迟不仅会减缓资产出售速度,还会阻碍雪佛龙实现成本节约、人员配备和运营协同效应。赫斯股东将错失获得雪佛龙高得多的股息的机会,而这正是这笔交易的诱惑。

分析师和投资者表示,2025 年下半年的交易可能迫使雪佛龙达成和解,从而减少承诺的交易利益。但如果估值高于埃克森美孚的预期,也可能使反竞标变得更加昂贵。

“埃克森美孚可能给形势带来了足够的不确定性,对于雪佛龙来说,为了解决这个问题,或许放弃一些经济利益也是值得的,”Westchester Capital Management 联席总裁罗伊·贝伦 (Roy Behren) 表示。根据伦敦证券交易所的数据,截至 6 月底,该公司持有价值近 2.26 亿美元的 Hess 股票。

(Sabrina Valle 报道;Gary McWilliams 和 Marguerita Choy 编辑)

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原文链接/OeDigital

Hess Guyana's Value is Central to Exxon Mobile Spat

Copyright Christophe/AdobeStock
Copyright Christophe/AdobeStock

An arbitration panel that will decide a high-profile clash between Exxon Mobil and Chevron will delve into the secret value of Hess' oil riches in Guyana, people familiar with the matter said.

Chevron last October offered to pay $53 billion for Hess, one of the two biggest deals in the largest wave of consolidation in the oil industry in decades. The asset most coveted by Chevron in the takeover is Hess’s stake in a Guyana field operated by top U.S. rival Exxon.

Exxon and China's CNOOC  have challenged the deal, claiming a contractual first right to buy Hess’s stake in the field, a matter to be decided by a three-person arbitration panel. Getting the panel to consider the appraised value is central to Exxon's claim that the deal is an asset acquisition disguised as a merger. Exxon believes the Guyana asset is so valuable that the merger would trigger a change of control and give Exxon and CNOOC a right of first refusal to the asset sale, the people said.

On the other hand, Chevron and Hess do not believe the Guyana valuation will have any bearing on the panel's view of the contract arbitration. Their position is Exxon's right does not apply because there is no change in Hess' control of its Guyana unit, people familiar with their thinking said. Valuation can be a critical and lengthy step in change of control disputes, said Christopher B. Strong, a vice president at trade group Association of International Energy Negotiators (AIEN) and a partner at Vinson & Elkins law firm, which has done work for Exxon.

The prize in the contest is Hess' 30% stake in the Stabroek offshore Guyana joint venture with some 11.6 billion barrels in oil and gas discovered so far. The consortium, which includes Exxon with a 45% stake and CNOOC with 25%, operates all of Guyana's output and earned $6.33 billion in profits last year by pumping 137 million barrels of oil. That output is expected to more than triple by 2027.

Exxon CEO Darren Woods told Reuters earlier this year he would consider a counterbid for all or part of Hess Guyana's stake, but only after the arbitration panel accepts its claim to first right, and a price has been determined. Woods' position remains unchanged, people familiar with his thinking said this month. Wall Street analysts estimate Hess Guyana represents about 70% of Chevron's $53 billion bid.

Copyright atdr/AdobeStock

NO COMPROMISE

The case hinges on whether a change of control in Hess Guyana will occur. The deal is structured so Hess will remain intact and become an affiliate of Chevron, the two companies have said. "Exxon and CNOOC continue to ignore the plain language of the operating agreement, and Chevron and Hess remain confident that the arbitration will confirm that the Stabroek ROFR (right of first refusal) does not apply to the merger," the companies said in response to Reuters questions.

Chevron CEO Michael Wirth recently dismissed the chance of any compromise with Exxon and CNOOC. The companies had held talks earlier this year, but they halted when Exxon filed the arbitration case.

"It doesn't appear that (a compromise) is how this is going to end up," Wirth said on Aug. 2.

However, if the panel accepts the right of first refusal applies, Hess has said it will not sell its Guyana stake to Exxon or CNOOC. Hess will remain independent if the Chevron deal is quashed, CEO John Hess said earlier this year.

PRESSURE ON CHEVRON

Chevron could use a Guyana boost. Its profits have fallen for the last six quarters on a year-over-year basis. Its share price has dropped 8.7% in the last 52 weeks, compared with a 7.7% increase at rival Exxon. In May, Exxon closed its $60 billion acquisition of top U.S. shale oil producer Pioneer Natural Resources, which was the biggest acquisition in the latest consolidation wave. The deal helped Exxon deliver $9.24 billion in second-quarter earnings, more than twice Chevron's profit for the same period.

"(Exxon) is in the best shape I've seen it in 20, 25 years. It has put itself in a remarkable position," said oil analyst Paul Sankey.

Meanwhile, Chevron's CEO is shaking up the company, replacing lieutenants and relocating the company's headquarters to Texas from California. Wirth also aims raise up to $15 billion from asset sales, after the Hess deal closes. He had hoped to close the deal in the first half of 2024, and the delay stalls Chevron's ability to reap cost savings, staffing and operating synergies in addition to slowing its asset sales. Hess shareholders miss out on getting Chevron's much higher dividend payments, which was a lure for the deal.

A second-half 2025 closing could pressure Chevron into a settlement that lessens promised deal benefits, analysts and investors said. But if the valuation proves to be higher than Exxon expects, it also could make a counterbid more expensive.

"Exxon may be creating enough uncertainty in the situation that it'll be worthwhile for Chevron to perhaps give up some economics in order to get this thing resolved," said Roy Behren, co-president at Westchester Capital Management, which owned nearly $226 million in Hess stock at the end of June, according to LSEG.

(Reporting by Sabrina Valle; editing by Gary McWilliams and Marguerita Choy)

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