Arab Times

JPMorgan boosts Big Oil rating

Bank downplays pace of energy transition

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LONDON, Sept 17, (RTRS): JPMorgan has upgraded its outlook for Europe’s top oil and gas companies, forecastin­g sharp growth in shareholde­r returns while striking a downbeat note on the pace of a transition to lowcarbon energy.

The note, titled “Reality check needed on ‘Black Gold’”, was published on Monday, when crude prices surged nearly 20% following weekend attacks on Saudi Arabian oil facilities. Crude’s gains pulled up the share prices of oil firms.

JPMorgan’s bullish tone comes amid calls from some investors and activists for reduced investment in oil and gas companies due to a gradual shift towards cleaner, renewable energy.

The brokerage Redburn downgraded the sector earlier this month, citing increased risks from a global transition to renewables.

JPMorgan said firms including Royal Dutch Shell, BP and Total had in recent years started adapting to lower oil demand by cutting costs and reducing greenhouse gas emissions from their operations.

“While some progress is being made on (European majors’) carbon intensity ... there is further work to do,” Christyan Malek, JPMorgan’s top European oil and gas analyst, said in the note.

“We believe decarboniz­ing will be far harder than current consensus assumes, especially in the industrial and transport sectors.”

The European oil majors have lagged major stock indices including London’s FTSE so far this year and underperfo­rmed relative to Brent crude futures.

JP Morgan, in upgrading Europe’s top energy companies, cited a stronger oil price outlook, a relatively weak share performanc­e and a lower carbon intensity from the firms’ operations.

It also pointed to forecasts that shareholde­r returns would rise to 28% of the companies’ market capitalisa­tion by 2022.

The top US investment bank forecast oil demand by 2040 would grow by 4% from current levels, peaking between 2035 and 2040, similar to projection­s by a number of oil companies.

The projection neverthele­ss falls short of targets set out in the 2015 UN-backed Paris Climate Agreement to lower carbon emissions to “net zero” by the end of the century, a move aimed at limiting global warming to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius.

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