Edmonton Journal

Hit by bad hedges, Cenovus posts $914M loss

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

Cenovus Energy Inc. lost a big bet on oil prices, as the oilsands producer posted a massive net loss Wednesday thanks in part to a hedging program that the company vowed never to repeat.

“I don’t think you will ever see this company hedge at the very high levels that you’ve seen this year and in the back half of last year,” Cenovus president and CEO Alex Pourbaix said in an interview, after his firm announced a $914 million net loss for the first quarter.

A big part of that net loss can be attributed to its hedging program that led to a $469 million riskmanage­ment loss.

Calgary-based Cenovus hedged 80 per cent of its oil production in the first half of this year to oil prices that range between US$45.30 at the low end and US$62.77 per barrel at the high end. West Texas Intermedia­te oil prices dipped below US$60 per barrel for only one week in the middle of February and hit US$68 per barrel in mid-day trading Wednesday.

“I suspect the reason that previous management did this was because, of course, they had undertaken a ton of debt and wanted to fix the numbers,” said Len Racioppo, managing director of Coerente Capital Management Inc., which owns almost 700,000 Cenovus shares.

Racioppo opposed Cenovus’s $17.7-billion deal to buy assets from ConocoPhil­lips Canada last year, which he said saddled the oilsands producer with too much debt and should have been subject to a shareholde­r vote given the dilution of the shares.

The deal more than doubled the company’s production, which in the first quarter rose to 487,464 barrels of oil equivalent per day, up 164 per cent from 184,001 bpd at the same time a year earlier.

The company also indicated on an earnings call Wednesday that it could scale back further production growth if new export pipelines are not built to carry oil out of Alberta.

“From a pipeline perspectiv­e, I remain an optimist that most, if not all, of the three major projects would go,” Pourbaix said of Kinder Morgan Canada’s Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, TransCanad­a Corp.’s Keystone XL pipeline and Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3.

Pourbaix would not say how much oil Cenovus is shipping by rail at the moment, but indicated it is scaling up.

The lack of pipeline capacity and challenges securing railway cars has led to large discounts for Canadian oil, which also affected Cenovus’s hedging program in the first quarter.

Canaccord Genuity analyst Dennis Fong said Cenovus’s hedging program was understand­able given the need to manage the company’s debt obligation­s.

In the future, Pourbaix said the best way for Cenovus to manage through volatile commodity prices — including volatile swings in the discounts Canadian oil producers accept for their crude relative to WTI — is to deleverage. “I’m very, very focused on paying down our debt,” Pourbaix said, adding that was also priority for the rest of the new-look management team.

Pourbaix took over from previous CEO Brian Ferguson six months ago and has since overhauled the company’s executive team. It hired new chief financial officer Jonathan McKenzie away from competitor Husky Energy Inc. to replace Ivor Ruste, who is retiring at the end of the month.

Pourbaix said he was looking for a CFO who would stay with the company over the long-term and that McKenzie “has a great deal of runway in front of him.”

The company has also put up two other Calgary oilpatch veterans to join its board of directors, which angry shareholde­rs has also said is in need of renewal.

Shareholde­rs will vote on adding Keith MacPhail, the executive chairman at Bonavista Energy Corp. and chairman of NuVista Energy Ltd., and former TransCanad­a Corp. and Taliman Energy Inc. CEO Hal Kvisle to the company’s board.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix pledged Wednesday that the firm won’t hedge at “very high levels” again. He noted that the best way to manage volatile commodity prices is to deleverage.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix pledged Wednesday that the firm won’t hedge at “very high levels” again. He noted that the best way to manage volatile commodity prices is to deleverage.

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