Edmonton Journal

Analysts predict oil majors to have bumper Q2 earnings

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

Improved oil prices and juicy refining margins have meant a bumper second quarter for major oil companies with analysts expecting — after years of either negative or meagre results — a windfall of cash.

“Things are finally looking up for the perenniall­y lagging Canadian energy sector,” GMP FirstEnerg­y analysts Stephen Harris and Anthony Prost wrote in a research note.

In recent years, embattled Canadian oil firms have cut staff, slashed budgets and reduced costs to grapple with an extended period of low oil prices. Since the start of the year, however, the price of oil has risen steadily from less than US$60 per barrel for West Texas Intermedia­te to US$67.75 per barrel on Monday, at times breaching US$70.

In addition, the value of the Canadian dollar has fallen relative to the U.S. dollar and since Canadian oil companies sell their barrels in U.S. dollars but pay their expenses in Canadian dollars, the net effect has been positive.

“With WTI nearing $100 (Canadian), commodity markets tightening, and many companies seeing rising free cash flows, we think momentum in the energy sector can be sustained,” Harris and Prost wrote.

They are not alone. Financial analysts at Canadian banks, U.S. banks, credit ratings agencies and fund managers expect both Canadian and foreign oil producers to report vastly improved quarterly earnings figures this week.

Suncor Energy Inc., Cenovus Energy Inc., Husky Energy Inc. and Imperial Oil Ltd. all report second quarter results this week and should benefit from higher crude prices and wide margins at their refining divisions.

But analysts don’t expect to see Canadian companies boosting spending on growth projects.

“The market is looking for discipline­d capital and measured growth,” Wood Mackenzie analyst Stephen Kallir said in an interview. “If you see oil begin to escalate, we don’t see that materially changing what the strategy is going to be, which is growing within cash flow.”

Kallir added that integrated Canadian producers — Suncor, Imperial and Husky — would also benefit from their upgrading and refining operations, which have insulated them from the big discounts for heavy oil produced in Canada.

Similarly, AltaCorp Capital analyst Nick Lupick said in a research note that Suncor, Cenovus, Husky and Imperial “are likely to deliver strong quarters of solid financial results with crack spreads rallying in North America.”

If the results live up to the hype, investor sentiment toward Calgarybas­ed oil firms may improve after a period of extreme pessimism.

“The Canadian energy sector is not in nearly as bad of shape as the rhetoric and news headlines suggest,” National Bank Financial analysts Travis Wood and Dan Payne wrote in a research note, which also predicted dramatical­ly improved cash flow numbers for domestic companies.

Despite rising oil prices, there were significan­t stretches during the quarter in which oilsands facilities were shut down for maintenanc­e, which Cannacord Genuity analyst Dennis Fong said has not been well understood by the market.

Suncor and Imperial have both been working to bring the Syncrude oilsands mining joint venture back online after a power outage caused the facility to shut down unexpected­ly close to the end of the quarter in late June. That 350,000 barrels-per-day project is not expected to be fully back online until the fall.

However, Fong said that oil production from Canada’s large cap producers is expected to remain flat, on average, as the companies begin reporting, partly as a result of a “turnaround,” an industry term for a period of planned maintenanc­e.

If you see oil begin to escalate, we don’t see that materially changing what the strategy is going to be, which is growing within cash flow.

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