National Post

Cenovus posts profit as Conoco deal starts paying dividends

Shares jump 11% following $2.6B profit in 2Q

- Geoffrey Morgan gmorgan@ nationalpo­st. com Twitter. com/geoffreymo­rgan

• Analysts were largely unimpresse­d with Cenovus Energy Inc.’ s massively improved earnings numbers Thursday that came after its blockbuste­r $ 17.7 billion acquisitio­n of ConocoPhil­lip’s oilsands assets earlier this year.

Cenovus president and CEO Brian Ferguson said on an earnings call its massive purchase helped boost the company’s better- than- expected results.

“In a volatile price environmen­t, economies of scale are i mportant and the acquisitio­n has roughly doubled the scale of our company and improved our sustainabi­lity,” Ferguson said.

Cenovus shares jumped 11 per cent in morning trading after the company reported net earnings of $ 2.6 billion in the second quarter, up from a $267 million loss during the same period a year ago. Those earnings included a $ 1.8 billion gain from a tax revaluatio­n. They ended the day at $10.86, up 9.2 per cent.

The company’s total production hit around 437,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the quarter – also up substantia­lly from the 264,580 boed from the second quarter of 2016, thanks to the acquisitio­n.

“We would recommend investors look past the headline beat on cash flow, which relative to our estimates, was driven almost entirely by one-time cash tax recoveries and currency-related gains,” Raymond James analyst Chris Cox wrote in a note, adding that there were “no meaningful announceme­nts that lead us to temper our bearish outlook on the stock.”

Cenovus stock has fallen by around 42 per cent since the company announced the ConocoPhil­lips asset purchase in late March, as investors fretted over the high price paid by the company amid a depressed oil price environmen­t. Under pressure, Ferguson announced his retirement and the company is in the midst of a global search for a new CEO.

Cenovus, which had announced it would sell its Pelican Lake oilsands property and its light-oil Suffield asset at the time of the deal, said on Thursday it had also opened data rooms to drum up interest in its Weyburn and Palliser convention­al oil assets.

Ferguson said the company expects to announce sales for each of those properties before the end of the year for proceeds of between $4 billion and $ 5 billion. “While they are no longer core to Cenovus, these are high- quality assets t hat continued to deliver solid cash flows and safe reliable performanc­e in the second quarter,” he said.

AltaCorp Capital analyst Nicholas Lupick said in a research note that “all eyes remain on assets sales,” though he noted t he company’s financial and operating results were positive.

Oil prices plunged in the middle of the second quarter but many oilsands companies including Cenovus were able to post posted earnings during the period that exceeded expectatio­ns.

MEG Energy Corp. posted net earnings of $ 104 million in the quarter, up from a $ 146 million net loss a year ago, and the company’s shares also jumped 8 per cent in mid- day trading Thursday to $5.12 each.

Athabasca Oil Corp., which recently acquired Statoil ASA’s oilsands assets for $832 million last year, also reversed losses and posted net earnings of $24 million in the second quarter, compared with a $59 million net loss at the same time last year.

 ?? LARRY MACDOUGAL / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “In a volatile price environmen­t, economies of scale are important and the acquisitio­n has roughly doubled the scale of our company and improved our sustainabi­lity,” said Brian Ferguson, president & CEO of Cenovus.
LARRY MACDOUGAL / THE CANADIAN PRESS “In a volatile price environmen­t, economies of scale are important and the acquisitio­n has roughly doubled the scale of our company and improved our sustainabi­lity,” said Brian Ferguson, president & CEO of Cenovus.

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