Houston Chronicle

Gushing about oil

-

ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) is suffering through a disrupted oil market, and it’s going to be some time before supply and demand are brought back into some form of harmony. This makes profitabil­ity virtually impossible in the near term for most oil stocks. Yet over the longer run, ExxonMobil is wellpositi­oned to thrive. Remember that this is an integrated oil giant that’s not solely dependent on drilling and exploratio­n. Yes, drilling is what offers the company its greatest growth prospects. But this is a company with plenty of cash flow potential from its downstream operations, such as refining and petrochemi­cal operations.

For the foreseeabl­e future, ExxonMobil is expected to lean on its downstream segment, which should benefit from weaker crude oil prices. ExxonMobil has the size and scale to optimize its production costs — and the luxury of cutting back on capital expenditur­es to control cash outflows during a period of unpreceden­ted demand weakness. Recently, the company cut $10 billion from its capital spending forecast for 2020. Management plans to keep the company’s dividend intact for now, but that could change. Still, even if the dividend were reduced to a third of its recent level, it would offer a reasonable payout — its dividend recently yielded 7.7 percent.

ExxonMobil’s balance sheet is solid, too, with a debt-to-capital ratio better than most of its peers. The company is likely to emerge from the pandemic economy in good shape. Andrews McNeel Syndicatio­n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States