'Feast of riches' may be over for oil companies
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HOUSTON: Oil companies are going to be reporting their fourth-quarter earnings in a few weeks, and Wall Street analysts are already saying that they are not going to make a lot of investors happy.
Most energy companies’ stocks have been on a steady charge up the charts in the past few years, as oil prices more than doubled since the beginning of the decade, to more than $70 a barrel in July.
But with oil prices now plummeting, several Wall Street analysts predicted that large integrated companies, refiners and smaller independent companies will report significant declines in profit next month.
“It’s not going to be very pretty,” Fadel Gheit, senior energy analyst at Oppenheimer & Company, said. “There will be no more record earnings.”
The predictions of disappointing earnings are based on the fact that the average spot price for benchmark crude fell to $60.06 in the fourth quarter from $70.56 in the third quarter of 2006.
Most analysts say that prices have declined because of the warmer winters in the United States and Europe, increasing signs that consumers and manufacturers are conserving energy to cope with high prices, and hedge fund traders selling energy futures at a quickening pace.
Even as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries scrambles to defend prices by attempting to curtail production, most analysts believe the cartel’s effect will be limited.
With oil prices having fallen by about 10 percent in the last few weeks, several companies have already alerted the investment community that their feast of riches is over, at least for now.
ConocoPhilips said last week that its refining and marketing margins could drop in the fourth quarter by as much as 25 percent.
Chevron, the second-largest American energy company, warned this week that its average selling price for crude oil had dropped to $52.26, down from $63.98 in the third quarter.
BP has reported that its fourth- quarter daily oil production declined in the most recent quarter, to 3.82 million barrels from 4.02 million barrels. Part of BP’s problems come from its inability so far to start production at its giant Thunder Horse platform in the Gulf of Mexico, which was damaged by hurricanes in 2005.
But most of the big companies have been hurting by spiraling labor and service costs and from declining oil and gas production in mature fields in North America and the North Sea. Many companies face an urgent need to modernize and otherwise reinvest in aging pipeline networks and refineries, and their increasing dependence on finding reserves in unstable areas like Venezuela and West Africa brings higher security costs.
Many of those endemic problems were overshadowed by rising oil and gas prices in recent years, as well as by stock buybacks by ExxonMobil and other companies, which further raised their stock prices.
Crude oil prices bounced up and down on international markets Thursday.
Analysts are divided on whether the expected earnings disappointments are temporary or long lasting. They agree, though, that oil prices will be unpredictable.
“I think this is a seasonal pullback,” said Nicole Decker, an energy analyst at Bear Stearns, who predicted a rebound in the spring. She noted that the current dip in oil prices was at a level approximately equivalent to the level seen at this time last year.
She projected an average crude oil price for 2007 of $60 a barrel, compared with $66 in 2006.
Gheit sees more lasting pressure on oil prices. “I see prices drifting lower barring international crises,” he said. But he added, “I would not rule out $80 oil if we invade Iran.”
Gheit said he expected to see the largest earnings declines among independent companies and petroleum refiners because of declining refining margins that had reached record highs a year ago over dislocations caused by the Katrina and Rita hurricanes. He said the refiners like Tesoro, Sunoco and Valero and Frontier could report some of the sharpest declines in earnings.
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