Tag: Exxon

  • Govt opens up LNG sector, five companies plan to set up terminals

    Govt opens up LNG sector, five companies plan to set up terminals

    Following the introduction of ease-of-doing-business strategy by the government, as many as five private sector companies were planning to set up Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminals, having the capacity to re-gasify 500-700 Million Cubic Feet per day (MMCFD) gas each.

    “We do believe the LNG is here to stay, but we have decided that this sector has to be completely opened up. So, the government has allowed all five companies that wanted to set up their own terminals in Pakistan,” a senior official privy to petroleum sector developments said.

    He said it was not the government job to decide who had the muscle, market clout and power to succeed. “It is for the market to decide.”

    The official said the government’s footprint in the coming years in the energy, as well as other sectors, was going to shrink. “It is not only the government’s stated policy but fervent desire and intention.”

    He said the government was going to do major restructuring on the pipelines side by converting them into ‘open access pipes’ and during the next two years, “We intend to separate the transmission from distribution and open up the sector for use through private supplies and open access. Let the private sector compete with government distribution companies and let them run faster and become more efficient.”

    He said private sector companies including Exxon, Shell, and Mitsubishi besides Spanish and French firms were poised to establish LNG terminals in Pakistan, who were considered the world-leading players in the energy sector.

    The official said the federal cabinet had recently cleared the private sector companies, adding “A terminal, as per international standard, takes almost two years to complete once its construction starts.”

    Currently, the official said, two LNG terminals were operating at Port Qasim Karachi and injecting around 1200 MMCFD gas in the distribution network, adding the capacity of Floating Storage and Re-gasification Units (FSRUs) was also being increased.

    He said the Petroleum Division had planned to bring an additional 400 MMCFD LNG in the system by December, out of which “200 MMCFD is guaranteed as tender had already been floated to ensure transparency.”

    The LNG, he said, was considered the only available instant-option to meet the country’s ever-growing energy needs, as currently, domestic production of gas was around four Billion Cubic Feet per Day (BCFD) against the demand of 7-8 BCFD. “There is a 50 percent gas shortfall in the energy mix needs of the country.”

  • Govt kept gas prices low despite OGRA suggesting increase: Omar Ayub

    Govt kept gas prices low despite OGRA suggesting increase: Omar Ayub

    ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Petroleum Omar Ayub Khan on Tuesday said that despite Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) suggesting gas price increase to account for increased costs since 2015, the government chose not to pass these costs on to the consumer for over two years.

    The minister, this while chairing a meeting at Petroleum Division, said that the government cross subsidises various categories of customers but used to keep the total collection the same to avoid any subsidy or shortfall. He added that this resulted in accumulation of unrecovered cost of Rs141.8 billion for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited (SNGPL) and Rs38.6 billion for Sui Southern Gas Company (SSGC), or a total of PKR 180 billion, as of June 30, 2018.

    He claimed that these numbers are based on filings made by gas companies with OGRA and audited accounts prior to the present government. “The outgoing government itself recognised the shortfalls in an ECC meeting held on May 17, 2018, and allowed to stagger the same over a period of four years onwards,” he said.

    He further mentioned that the new government had no choice but to increase the prices to recover this cost that should have been passed on by the previous government. “Anyone taking a position that there was no need of gas price increase with this shortfall in June 2018, which is audited, and confirmed by OGRA, is merely an attempt to hide the facts,” he added.

    The minister said that OGRA determines the average price of locally produced gas annually based on projected costs of the two Sui companies.

    Moreover, the petroleum minister said that the government will fully facilitate foreign investors in the country.

    Talking to a delegation of ExxonMobil here on Tuesday, he said that many employment opportunities will be generated after exploration of energy resources in Pakistan.

    Speaking on the occasion, Special Assistant for Petroleum Nadeem Babar said that there are bright chances of energy resources from Kekra-I in the sea.

    He said the government will fully cooperate for independent and secure investment in the country.

     

     

     

  • Saudi’s Aramco world’s most profitable oil company: Report

    Saudi’s Aramco world’s most profitable oil company: Report

    LONDON: Saudi Aramco is the world’s most profitable oil company, Bloomberg reported on Friday, but its huge earnings and cash flows may still fail to justify its desired $2 trillion valuation.

    Financial performance at Aramco has long been one of the best-kept secrets in the oil industry but as the company prepares for a long-awaited initial public offering (IPO) this year or next it needs to tell investors what it earns and how it operates.

    Bloomberg news agency cited company accounts as saying Aramco had net income of $33.8 billion in the first six months of 2017 and cash flows of $52.1 billion.

    Aramco said: “This is inaccurate, Saudi Aramco does not comment on speculation regarding its financial performance and fiscal regime.”

    The accounts, prepared to the IFRS standard, showed the firm made $7.2 billion in net income in the first of half of 2016, when crude averaged $41 a barrel, Bloomberg said.

    Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has made the Aramco IPO a cornerstone of Saudi economic reform to 2030, wants to raise a record $100 billion by selling a 5 percent stake in Aramco on local and foreign exchanges.

    That would give Aramco a market capitalization of $2 trillion, the biggest achieved by any company and dwarfing peers such as Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell.

    By comparison, Shell’s current cost of supplies earnings excluding one-offs – the closest equivalent to net income – stood at $7.4 billion in the first half of 2017, the same as Exxon’s.

    Exxon had cash flow from operations and asset sales at $16 billion in the first half of 2017, compared with Shell cash flows of $20.8 billion.

    Exxon’s current market capitalization stands at $327 billion and Shell is worth $285 billion.

    Even though Aramco’s cash flows are two to three times bigger, its desire for a market value six to seven times higher than those of Exxon or Shell might look too ambitious to many investors and analysts who have said the company could be worth more than $1 trillion.

     

  • Will Aramco’s IPO be a profit dream for investors?

    Will Aramco’s IPO be a profit dream for investors?

    London: When oil giant Saudi Aramco discloses its financials for the first-time next year, it must either surprise investors with world record profits or reduce its aspirations for a $2 trillion valuation in its initial public offering (IPO).

    Investors have long debated whether Aramco could be valued anywhere close to $2 trillion, the figure suggested by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who wants to raise cash through the IPO to finance investments aimed at helping wean the world’s biggest oil exporting nation off dependency on crude.

    Based on Aramco’s oil reserves of 266 billion barrels and a valuation of $7 to $8 per barrel in line with recent industry acquisitions – such as Total’s purchase of Maersk’s oil assets – Aramco warrants close to the $2 trillion valuation.

    But that is not the only metric for an energy firm’s worth. By other measures, Aramco’s target valuation may be challenging.

    Most other metrics for the world’s largest oil producing company are simply not known and will not be disclosed until Aramco publishes financial results before the planned IPO in 2018.

    Yet a simple calculation using globally accepted ratios for Aramco’s peers – enterprise value versus core earnings (EV/EBITDA) – shows the Saudi firm has to report EBITDA in the region of $130 billion to achieve a $2 trillion valuation.

    Such an EBITDA figure would be a global first. No firm in any industry has reported earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) above $100 billion.

    By comparison, Apple the technology giant and the world’s most valuable listed firm that is worth more than $830 million, reported EBITDA of $82 billion in 2015.

    AWAITING BOOK-BUILDING

    Exxon Mobil the world’s largest listed energy firm with a market capitalization of $365 billion in 2016, reported EBITDA of $23 billion last year, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon data. In 2012, it reported EBITDA of $65 billion – but that was when oil traded well above $100 a barrel. Benchmark Brent crude is now around $54 LCOc1.

    Last year, Exxon traded at EV/EBITDA of more than 15 times, which is high by energy industry standards. If Aramco matched that same high ratio, its core earnings would need to be around $130 billion to achieve its target valuation.

    Aramco would not be drawn when asked to comment on how it would achieve the $2 trillion figure.

    “This is highly speculative. We do not comment on speculation or rumor,” the company told Reuters in a statement.

    A Saudi Arabia-based industry source said Aramco’s value could not be calculated until the completion of book-building to assess investor appetite.

    The source said it was misleading to compare Aramco with Exxon, which has less than half the Saudi firm’s oil output and not even a 10th of its reserves. EBITDA should not be the only measure, the source added.

    Nevertheless, Aramco would do well to secure Exxon’s high ratios. Investors tend to like Exxon more than other oil firms, handing it ratios that are sometimes more generous than popular technology firms such as Google) and Apple.

    For example, Exxon’s rivals Shell BP and Total trade at EV/EBITDA of around six times. If Aramco was assessed at that level, it would need to show core earnings at an astonishing $330 billion a year to achieve a valuation of $2 trillion.

    “One thing you never do ahead of an IPO is to tell the market how much the company will be worth as you immediately become hostage to a number or a timetable,” said a Western investment banker, who was involved in listing another state energy firm.

    DRAWING CONCLUSIONS

    Yet Aramco could prove hugely profitable, given its oil output of about 10 million barrels per day (bpd) and some of the world’s cheapest crude recovery rates, alongside its global refinery network that adds further value.

    Exxon by comparison has less than half Aramco’s output – with oil-equivalent production of 4 million bpd in 2016, while the U.S. firm’s reserves are a fraction of Aramco’s – with proved oil-equivalent reserves of about 20 billion barrels.

    Aramco has never published results, but conclusions about its earnings can be drawn from Saudi Arabia’s accounts, given oil constitutes the lion’s share of the nation’s revenues, said Fareed Mohamedi, chief economist at U.S.-based Rapidan Group.

    “Based on the Saudi current-account balance, Aramco had revenues of $160 billion last year from just oil and refined products exports when the average price of oil was $43 a barrel,” Mohamedi said.

    “So, if the price of oil goes to $70 per barrel, it is not impossible for Aramco to make a top line of $250 billion a year. Given that operational costs of Aramco are one of the lowest in the world, it is not impossible to see them reporting the bottom line or earnings on a huge scale – of $100 billion a year and above,” he said.

    Financials aside, investors will also assess country risk when working out Aramco’s valuation.

    Exxon benefits from having its headquarters in the United States, even if some of its operations and production are in politically unstable nations.

    Aramco’s head office is in Saudi Arabia, a nation in a volatile region with a war in Yemen on its doorstep.

    “Aramco is definitely a fantastic, modern and high-quality company,” said the Western banker. “But unfortunately, no one can say that Saudi Arabia is a fantastic country from the geopolitical prospect.