Oil to open 2018 stuck amid thirst to grow, wary investors

Oil to open 2018 stuck between thirst to grow, wary investors copy

Bloomberg

Investor exhaustion with poor returns from the oil and gas industry may mean less financing to expand the US shale boom next year, and less of a drive for consolidation.
After nearing a record in 2016, equity issues from US oil and gas companies are on pace for an eight-year low this year, amid doubts about the stability of the rally in global crude prices. Mergers and acquisitions and initial public offerings got off to a strong start but petered out as the year wore on.
While explorers including Anadarko Petroleum Corp. and ConocoPhillips have preached the need for fiscal discipline, investors remain skeptical, said Bobby Tudor, chairman of Houston-based investment bank Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. That’s tightened the flow of new money into the industry, and it’s likely to chill deal-making as buyers and sellers alike wait for stock prices to rebound.
“You’ve had a decoupling, where the companies have not followed oil prices higher, and the investor apathy has been stunning,” Tudor said in a telephone interview.
“What investors are saying is that as soon as oil peaks its
nose above the parapet of $60 a barrel, the switch will go on
and all those drilling rigs will go back to work.”
West Texas Intermediate crude futures steadied just above $57 a barrel, up almost 7 percent for the year, as traders digested last week’s decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other producers to extend supply curbs through 2018.
Still, as prices rise, so do investor fears that shale dril-
lers — companies used to emphasising growth above all
else — will refocus on boosting production.
The S&P 500 Energy Index is down 7.5 percent for 2017. It’s a sign of the skepticism that has rippled through capital markets all year. US energy stock issues topped $41 billion last year, as explorers including Anadarko, Devon Energy Corp. and Concho Resources Inc. looked to shore up finances amid weak oil
prices or to fund expansion into new shale plays. This year, offerings are down by half, at $19.9 billion. The number of issues is down as well, from 110 last year to 63 so far in 2017.
The industry has turned instead to debt financing, with high-yield energy bond issues almost doubling this year to more than $50 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The bond numbers were inflated somewhat by a series of refinancing deals by top drillers,
as well as a bevy of issues by pipeline companies.
Initial public offerings by US oil and gas companies climbed in 2017, dominated by spinoffs of pipeline and infrastructure divisions by the likes of Hess Corp. and BP Plc. Still, IPOs trailed off in the second half of the year, with only one new issue so far in the fourth quarter — by Houston-based oilfield water-management business AQTWM Inc.
M&A followed the same
pattern, surging early on as explorers shelled out billions
for acreage in shale plays like
the Permian Basin in West
Texas and New Mexico. Activity tailed off as pessimism spread among investors.
Would-be buyers found their stock prices no longer an attractive currency to finance deals, and sellers were unhappy with the offers they received, although private equity-backed transactions picked up some of the slack.
That’s unlikely to change any time soon, said Tudor. With equity markets now focused on share buybacks, dividends and other returns, there’s less appetite for acquisitions that simply grow a company’s inventory of wells to drill, he said. Investors will need to see two to three quarters of fiscal discipline and growing cash flows before the climate shifts, he predicted.
“The equity window is closed,” Tudor said. “The market is basically saying, ‘No, I’d rather you grow less and actually give me back some money.”

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