伍德麦肯兹:全国并购支出创 20 年来新低

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, 《油田技术》副主编


伍德麦肯兹最近的分析显示,尽管最近国际石油公司(IOC)推动了并购市场的发展,但国家石油公司(NOC)却一直袖手旁观,国际支出较十年前的高位大幅下降。

根据 Wood Mackenzie 的数据,国家石油公司的国际并购支出已从每年超过 300 亿美元(2009 年至 2013 年)下降至不到 50 亿美元(2019 年至 2023 年)。同行在全球支出中的份额已从高峰时期的近 50% 下降到如今的不到 5%。

Wood Mackenzie 公司研究总监 Neivan Boroujerdi 表示:“石油公司曾经在国际业务发展方面投入巨资,但近年来并购支出大幅下降。然而,由于并购估值具有吸引力,且国家石油公司的财务评级创历史新高,国家石油公司通过国际业务发展填补战略空白的动力从未如此强劲。”

“随着(一些)国家石油公司日益私有化,海外扩张的动机已转向国际石油公司在投资组合竞争力和可持续性方面的共同动机。我们可以看到一些国家石油公司利用国际机会进行扩张,尤其是来自亚洲和中东的机会。”

“由于地缘政治障碍继续限制潜力,我们预计不会回到 2010 年代初的鼎盛时期,但对于东道国政府来说,现在是协调企业和国家驱动力并重返国际业务发展的最佳时机。”

中东国家石油公司成为主要参与者

伍德麦肯兹表示,中东国家石油公司的石油和天然气产能正在不断扩大,到 2050 年,它们作为一个整体的产量将比现在更多。

“中东国家石油公司比其他生产商更具优势,但它们也存在相对薄弱的领域,其投资组合主要集中在国内石油或天然气上——比其他同类国家石油公司更加集中,”Boroujerdi 说道。“因此,一些国家石油公司已经开始国际化努力,以寻求更多的多样性。我们已经看到沙特阿美和阿布扎比国家石油公司快速进入液化天然气领域,卡塔尔能源公司则希望通过勘探实现增长。达到临界规模将是一个挑战,但他们有雄心和能力来实现这一目标。”

亚洲和中国希望减少进口依赖

在亚洲,人口激增、经济扩张和煤改气将导致国家能源需求日益超过当地供应。尽管这些国家以某种形式致力于实现净零排放,但伍德麦肯兹预测,到 2030 年,石油和天然气供应总量将由目前的 90 亿桶油当量增加至每年 130 亿桶油当量。

“尽管在增加国内产量方面取得了成功,但国内资源却变得越来越昂贵,供应也越来越短缺。在我们的基本预测中,中国的“进口费用”将从 830 亿桶油当量(2000 - 2025 年)上升到 2250 亿桶油当量(2026 - 2050 年),”Boroujerdi 说道。“国内尚未发现的资源和进口合同将有助于弥补这一缺口。但获取海外资源将有助于对冲日益动荡的环境。”

交易定价仍然有利

过去 12 个月,石油和天然气大型合并案成为头条新闻,但国家石油公司仍然有收购的空间。

Wood Mackenzie 上游并购主管 Greig Aitken 表示:“在整合热潮席卷的北美以外,上游并购市场并不拥挤。2023 年全球仅有 200 笔交易,这是过去 20 年来交易数量第二少的一年。但国际上仍有许多实质性的优质机会。”

艾特肯继续说道:“其中一些美国公司交易看起来很昂贵,但其他地方的交易估值仍然低得多,尽管已经脱离了疫情后的低点。但为了应对能源转型放缓,整个行业的公司越来越多地重新关注石油和天然气投资组合。随着这种转变的继续,它最终将加剧收购竞争并推高交易价格。从这个角度来看,你需要快速行动。”

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/18072024/wood-mackenzie-national-ma-spend-hits-20-year-low/

 

此篇文章被标记为以下:

石油和天然气新闻


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Wood Mackenzie: National M&A spend hits 20-year low

Published by , Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,


While the mergers and acquisitions market has been recently supercharged by international oil companies (IOCs), national oil companies (NOCs) have sat on the sidelines, with international spending down significantly from highs a decade ago, according to recent analysis from Wood Mackenzie.

According to Wood Mackenzie, international M&A spend from NOCs has collapsed from over US$30 billion per year (2009 – 2013) to less than US$5 billion (2019 - 2023). The peer group's share of global spend has fallen from nearly 50% at peak to less than 5% today.

“NOCs were once big spenders in international business development, but M&A spend has slumped in recent years,” said Neivan Boroujerdi, Director, Corporate Research at Wood Mackenzie. “However, with M&A valuations attractive and NOCs’ financial ratings at all-time highs, the drivers for NOCs to fill strategic gaps through international business development have never been stronger.”

“With (some) NOCs becoming increasingly privatised, motivations for foreign expansion have moved towards those shared by IOCs in terms of portfolio competitiveness and sustainability. We could see several NOCs take advantage of international opportunities to expand, especially those from Asia and the Middle East.”

“We don’t expect a return to the heady days of the early 2010s as geopolitical barriers continue to limit potential, but there has never been a better time for host governments to align corporate and country drivers and return to international business development.”

Middle East NOCs emerge as major players

Middle East NOCs are growing oil and gas capacity and – as a group – will be producing more in 2050 than they are today, according to Wood Mackenzie.

“Middle East NOCs are well-placed to out-last other producers, but they do have areas of relative weakness, with portfolios overwhelmingly concentrated towards either domestic oil or gas – significantly more so than other NOC peer groups,” said Boroujerdi. “As a result, several have already kick-started Internationalisation efforts in search of more diversity. We have already seen Saudi Aramco and ADNOC fast-track entry into LNG and QatarEnergy look to grow via exploration. Achieving critical mass will be the challenge but they have the ambition – and capacity – to do it.”

Asian and Chinese look to reduce import reliance

In Asia, booming populations, expanding economies and coal-to-gas switching will see national energy demand increasingly outstrip local supply. While these countries are committed to net zero in one form or another, Wood Mackenzie forecasts an aggregate oil and gas supply shortfall of 13 billion boe per annum by 2030 – up from 9 billion today.

“Despite successful efforts at growing domestic production, homegrown resources are becoming increasingly costly and in short supply. China’s ‘import bill’ is set to rise from 83 billion boe (2000 – 2025) to 225 billion boe (2026 – 2050) in our base case,” said Boroujerdi. “Domestic yet-to-find resources and import contracts will help bridge the gap. But overseas resource capture would help hedge against an increasingly volatile environment.”

Deal pricing remains favourable

Oil and gas mega-mergers have made headlines over the last 12 months, but there is still room for NOCs to acquire.

"Outside of North America, where there's been a consolidation frenzy, the upstream M&A market is uncrowded," says Wood Mackenzie's head of upstream M&A, Greig Aitken. "There were only 200 transactions globally in 2023, that's the second fewest number of deals in the last 20 years. But there are still a number of material, high-quality opportunities available internationally.”

Aitken continued, "Some of those US corporate transactions have looked expensive, but elsewhere deal valuations remain much more subdued, despite having moved off post-covid lows. But companies across the industry are increasingly re-focusing on oil and gas portfolios in response to a slowing energy transition. As this pivot continues, it’s ultimately going to increase competition for acquisitions and push up deal prices. On that outlook, you want to be a fast mover.”

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/18072024/wood-mackenzie-national-ma-spend-hits-20-year-low/

 

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