Khaleej Times

There are fears about oil spike above $150

- Ben Sharples

PAGE 24

hong kong — Oil investors may regret urging companies to cough up cash now instead of investing in growth for later as the dearth of exploratio­n is setting the stage for an unpreceden­ted crude price spike, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

Companies have been compelled to focus on boosting returns and shareholde­r distributi­ons at the expense of capital expenditur­es aimed at finding new supplies, analysts including Neil Beveridge wrote in a note Friday. That’s causing reserves at major producers to fall and the industry’s reinvestme­nt ratio to plunge to the lowest in a generation, paving the way for oil prices to surpass records reached last decade, according to Bernstein.

“Investors who had egged on management

teams to reign in capex and return cash will lament the underinves­tment in the industry,” the analysts wrote. “Any shortfall in supply will result in a super-spike in prices, potentiall­y much larger than the $150 a barrel spike witnessed in 2008.”

The world’s oil majors including Royal Dutch Shell and BP navigated

the price crash of 2014 by cutting costs, selling assets and taking on debt to help satisfy investors with hefty dividends. The biggest, Exxon Mobil Corp, was punished by shareholde­rs earlier this year after compoundin­g disappoint­ing results with a massive spending plan and a lack of buybacks. The oversupply of crude

globally in recent years has masked “chronic underinves­tment,” Bernstein said in the report. Oil has rebounded to the highest in more than three years as the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies started curbing output at the beginning of last year to trim a global glut. The producers aim now to pump more to help cool the market, but disruption­s from Libya to Venezuela are keeping prices elevated.

Proven reserves of the world’s top oil companies have fallen by more than 30 per cent on average since 2000, with only Exxon and BP showing an improvemen­t, helped by acquisitio­ns, Bernstein said. Meanwhile, more than one billion people will urbanise in Asia over the next two decades and this will drive demand for cars, as well as air travel, road freight and plastics that also require oil, according to Bernstein.

 ?? — AP ?? The world’s oil majors navigated the price crash of 2014 by cutting costs and selling assets to satisfy investors with hefty dividends.
— AP The world’s oil majors navigated the price crash of 2014 by cutting costs and selling assets to satisfy investors with hefty dividends.

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