Reuters has reported by Global oil majors look to shed refineries as crude prices rebound Global oil majors
Chevron Corp and Royal Dutch Shell Plc are putting small refineries on
the auction block as they look to trim lower-margin assets in the face
of headwinds from rising crude oil prices.
Chevron,
the second largest U.S. oil company, is soliciting interest in its
Burnaby, British Columbia, refinery and gasoline stations, the company
told Reuters. Shell is looking for buyers for its Martinez, California,
refinery, two people familiar with the situation told Reuters. Shell
declined to comment.
These two
companies, along with peers Exxon Mobil Corp and BP Plc, have sold more
than a million barrels per day of U.S. refining capacity in the past
three years, according to Stratas Advisors, a Houston-based consultancy.
The world's five largest oil majors together still have enough U.S. capacity to refine about 4.7 million barrels per day.
Refining
profit margins have declined from highs seen in 2015, and the fear is
that as crude prices recover from a two-year rout, refiners will be
squeezed as the cost of oil rises but the price of gasoline does not
keep pace. Selling the plants while margins are still reasonably high
allows the majors to exit without a hit to their balance sheets.
Chevron
also told Reuters it has retained Rothschild & Co to market its 75
percent stake in a South Africa refinery. The fifth oil major,
Paris-based Total SA, retained Lazard to sell a 50 percent stake in its
sole U.S. refinery, but was unable to secure the price it desired,
according to sources.
Refining has
remained a profitable sector during a two-year oil price rout, so these
plants can fetch a relatively higher price than exploration and
production assets. Chevron and Shell have the highest cash-flow
deficits, said Lysle Brinker, director of equity research at IHS Energy,
and so have the most motivation to sell.
The two companies
have been investing in other areas of their business - Shell plunked
down $53 billion to buy BG Group earlier this year, while Chevron has
spent heavily on large-scale liquefied natural gas projects.
“They’re
much more strapped for cash, and they’re accelerating the sale of
assets that will get pretty decent prices," said Brinker. "A lot of the
asset sales that the big guys have been selling are downstream and
midstream, because those have been sought-after by private equity and
others because there’s more steady cash flow.”
These
assets may prove to be a better fit for smaller buyers that focus on
particular regions, such as the North American West Coast, or companies
that concentrate on global storage and trading, but not oil production.
SMALLER ASSETS ON BLOCK
While
the majors plan to continue to operate large, profitable refineries
that are well integrated with their oil production assets, refineries
outside of that footprint are likely to be sold, Brinker said.
Chevron's
downstream strategy has focused on running large scale refineries that
can serve markets in the United States and Asia and on operating
petrochemical plants that produce very profitable products.
The refinery in
British Columbia, however, refines light oil, rather than heavy crude
from Canada's oil sands, and its products are distributed in a smaller
region around British Columbia and down through Washington state.
Selling
smaller assets like that is likely something most companies are looking
at - or should be - said Mark Routt, chief economist for the Americas
with KBC Advanced Technologies in Houston.
"Far
better to sell it when it's good times than bad times," Routt said.
"It's not as good as it was in '15, but it’s still good times."
Chevron
in April agreed to sell its 54,000 barrel-per-day Kapolei, Hawaii,
refinery to a group backed by private equity, and Shell agreed in March
to exit its Motiva Enterprises joint venture with Saudi Aramco. Shell is
shedding a plant in Texas as a result of the dissolution of that
venture.
Chevron previously said it would sell its 75 percent stake in its South African unit, which includes a refinery in Cape Town.
(Reporting By Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York; Additional reporting by Ron Bousso in London; Editing by Bill Rigby)

No comments:
Post a Comment