分析:石油巨头并购时代后,大量资产出售迫在眉睫

随着 25 年来最大规模的能源巨头并购浪潮接近监管审查的尾声,美国石油和天然气公司可能面临艰难的挑战,他们需要在未来几年出售约 270 亿美元的资产来为投资者支付资金。

Shariq Khan、Sabrina Valle、Arathy Somasekhar 和 Gary McWilliams,路透社

随着 25 年来最大规模的能源巨头并购浪潮接近监管审查的尾声,美国石油和天然气公司可能面临艰难的挑战,他们需要在未来几年出售约 270 亿美元的资产来为投资者支付资金。

股票回购和股息是吸引投资者重返能源行业的必要手段。由于回报波动较大,且面临投资组合脱碳的压力,许多人都对能源行业敬而远之。能源类股在标普 500 指数中的权重仅为 4.1%,仅为 2011 年科技和医疗保健投资腾飞时的三分之一。

但银行家和分析师警告称,为这些资产寻找新主人不太可能快速或轻松。感兴趣的机构和欧洲石油买家越来越少,而且缺乏现金来为这些交易提供资金。曾经购买过石油巨头废弃资产的私募股权公司已经转向能源转型、社会影响和可再生能源投资。

自去年 10 月以来,已有 6 笔交易达成,总金额达 1,800 亿美元,规模空前。受增加未来可用石油储备的推动,预计大部分交易将在今年完成,并将向市场推出大量油井、管道、海上油田和基础设施。缺乏现成的买家意味着销售需要时间,可能会变成资产互换,而不是现金销售。

雪佛龙康菲石油 和西方石油三家收购方已承诺通过交易后出售筹集 160 亿至 230 亿美元资金。最大的交易撮合者埃克森美孚尚未披露剥离目标。但自 2021 年以来,该公司每年通过出售筹集 40 亿美元资金。

除了私募股权和国际买家数量减少外,监管审查力度加大也拖慢了上市进程。一些投资银行家认为,资产剥离可能会持续到明年。

进入市场

埃克森美孚的一位发言人证实,该公司于 5 月份以 600 亿美元收购了先锋自然资源 公司,希望出售位于二叠纪盆地的一系列常规石油和天然气资产,以专注于高增长资产。

知情人士称,康菲公司准备出售其在以 225 亿美元收购 马拉松石油公司时获得的西俄克拉荷马州天然气资产,而雪佛龙则可能会将赫斯的部分亚洲海上资产与目前待售的加拿大和美国天然气资产一起出售。由于监管审查正在进行中,知情人士要求匿名。

 分析师表示,西方石油公司已准备出售西德克萨斯州页岩资产,售价可能达到 10 亿美元,并且一旦完成对CrownRock的收购,该公司还可能增加墨西哥湾近海和中东的资产 。

埃克森美孚证实,该公司正在考虑出售位于西德克萨斯州和新墨西哥州的部分常规石油资产,“这符合我们持续评估投资组合的战略。”自先锋石油交易以来,该公司尚未设定新的资产出售目标。

康菲石油和西方石油拒绝就其资产出售目标发表评论。

雪佛龙发言人在赫斯收购案结束后表示,“我们将增加一些对其他公司极具吸引力的资产”。到 2028 年,这可能会产生 100 亿至 150 亿美元的税前收益。

障碍依然存在

资产管理公司 Barrow Hanley Global Investors 的投资组合经理路易斯·瑞 (Luis Rhi) 表示:“这些并不是业内最好的资产。”他认为,这些公司可以保持现状,直到资产市场好转。

休斯顿能源投资公司 Covalence Investment Partners 的联合管理合伙人戴维·克里格 (David Krieger) 表示:“可用资产与购买这些资产筹集的资金之间存在着真正的脱节。”“用于石油和天然气投资的资金只是过去的一小部分。”

投资银行 Carl Marks Advisors 董事总经理 Brian Williams 表示,欧洲石油巨头过去在美国页岩油领域的尝试失败,不太可能重回美国。他们“已经完成了学业”,并基本退出了美国页岩油领域。

能源顾问表示,规模较小的私募股权支持公司缺乏进行这些交易的资金。并购咨询公司 Petrie Partners 的数据显示,2023 年,宣布的石油交易中,只有 78% 的成本低于 10 亿美元,而 2019 年这一比例为 94%。

托德·迪特曼 (Todd Dittmann) 表示:“价值低于 10 亿美元的收购并不多。”他已在能源领域投资数十年,最近主要为 Angelo Gordon & Co. 投资。

他说:“能源私募股权存在退出问题,合伙人对此并不满意。”

还有谁?

包括专门收购成熟油田的 Hilcorp 在内的少数人持股石油公司、规模较小的上市石油生产商以及亚洲和中东投资者处于最佳位置。银行家们表示,日本公司最近对美国天然气表现出了更大的兴趣。

知情人士透露,亿万富翁杰弗里·希尔德布兰德 (Jeffery Hildebrand) 创立的 Hilcorp 公司“正迫不及待地想要”了解石油巨头抛弃的资源。

安永战略与交易集团合伙人布鲁斯·昂 (Bruce On) 表示:“我们继续看到欧洲以外地区——亚洲、中东和其他地区——的兴趣,这些地区有兴趣参与并部署资本。”

能源分析公司 Enverus 的并购总监安德鲁·迪特马尔 (Andrew Dittmar) 表示,美国顶级页岩油田的许多资产将被交易或保留以获取现金流。

他说:“西德克萨斯州和新墨西哥州将有大量弹药可供掉期和交易。”

原文链接/HartEnergy

Analysis: A Mountain of Asset Sales Loom After Oil Megamerger Era

U.S. oil and gas companies could face an uphill struggle to sell about $27 billion of assets to fund investor payouts over the next few years as the biggest wave of energy megamergers in 25 years nears the end of regulatory reviews.

Shariq Khan, Sabrina Valle, Arathy Somasekhar and Gary McWilliams, Reuters

U.S. oil and gas companies could face an uphill struggle to sell about $27 billion of assets to fund investor payouts over the next few years as the biggest wave of energy megamergers in 25 years nears the end of regulatory reviews.

The share buybacks and dividends are needed to lure investors back to an industry that many have shunned over volatile returns and pressure to decarbonize portfolios. Energy stocks represent just 4.1% by weight of the S&P 500, a third of their 2011 share as tech and health care investments took off.

But finding new owners for these properties is unlikely to be quick or easy, bankers and analysts warn. There are fewer institutional and European oil buyers interested, and a lack of ready cash to finance these deals. The private equity firms that once bought Big Oil's cast-offs have turned to energy transition, social impact and renewable investments.

The scale of mergers has been unprecedented with $180 billion from six deals since October. Driven by a rush to add oil reserves that can be tapped in the future, most of these deals are expected to wrap up this year and will unleash a burst of oil wells, pipelines, offshore fields and infrastructure packages onto the market. The lack of ready buyers suggests sales will take time and may turn into asset swaps, rather than cash sales.

Three acquirers - Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Occidental Petroleum- have pledged to raise between $16 billion and $23 billion combined from post-closing sales. Exxon Mobil, the top dealmaker, has not disclosed a divestiture target. But it has raised $4 billion per year in sale proceeds since 2021.

In addition to fewer private-equity and international buyers, more intensive regulatory reviews have slowed the marketing kickoff. Some investment bankers believe the divestitures could run well into next year.

Hitting the market

Exxon, which purchased Pioneer Natural Resources for $60 billion in May, wants to sell a collection of conventional oil and gas properties across the Permian Basin, to focus on higher growth assets, a spokesperson confirmed.

Conoco is primed to sell Western Oklahoma gas properties picked up in its $22.5 billion deal for Marathon Oil, and Chevron likely will place some of Hess' Asia offshore assets alongside its Canadian and U.S. gas packages now on the block, people familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity because regulatory reviews are underway.

Occidental has readied a sale of West Texas shale assets that could fetch $1 billion, and could add offshore Gulf of Mexico and Middle East assets once its CrownRock acquisition closes, say analysts.

Exxon confirmed it is exploring a sale of select conventional oil assets in West Texas and New Mexico "consistent with our strategy to continually evaluate our portfolio." It has not set a new asset sale target since the Pioneer deal.

Conoco and Occidental declined to comment on their asset sales targets.

A Chevron spokesperson said after the Hess closing "we're going to add some assets that are going to be highly attractive" to other companies. It could generate $10 billion to $15 billion in pre-tax proceeds through 2028.

Hurdles remain

"These are not the best assets in the industry," said Luis Rhi, a portfolio manager at asset management firm Barrow Hanley Global Investors, who believes the companies can afford to sit pat until the market for assets improves.

"There is a real disconnect between the assets available and the dollars raised to buy those assets," David Krieger, co-managing partner at Houston energy investment firm Covalence Investment Partners. "Dry powder for oil and gas investing is a fraction of what it used to be," he said.

Europe's oil majors, burned by past forays into U.S. shale, are not apt to return, said Brian Williams, managing director at investment bank Carl Marks Advisors. They "have completed their education" and have largely exited U.S. shale, he said.

Smaller private-equity backed firms lack the capital for these deals, say energy advisers. In 2023, just 78% of announced oil deals were below $1 billion in cost, compared to 94% in 2019, according to M&A advisory firm Petrie Partners.

"There are not a lot of sub-$1 billion acquisitions happening," said Todd Dittmann, who has invested in energy for several decades, mostly recently for Angelo Gordon & Co.

"There is an exit problem in energy private equity and partners are not happy about it," he said.

Who's left?

Closely-held oil companies including Hilcorp, which specializes in buying mature fields, smaller publicly traded oil producers, and Asian and Middle East investors are best positioned. Japanese companies recently have shown more interest in U.S. natural gas, say bankers.

Hilcorp, founded by billionaire Jeffery Hildebrand, "is chomping at the bit" to get a look at Big Oil's cast-offs, said a person familiar with the company.

Elsewhere, "We continue to see interest from parts of the globe outside Europe -- Asia, Middle East and other areas -- where there is appetite to be involved and deploy capital," said Bruce On, a partner in Ernst & Young's strategy and transactions group.

Many properties in the top U.S. shale field will be traded away or kept for their cash flow, said Andrew Dittmar, director of M&A at energy analytics firm Enverus.

"There is going to be a lot of ammunition for swaps and trades" in West Texas and New Mexico, he said.