Toronto Star

Cenovus shares sink as CEO retires

Company plans to sell off billions in assets after earning criticism for $17.7-billion deal

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY— Cenovus Energy shares fell more than10 per cent on Tuesday after the oil company announced plans for more asset sales, deeper cost-cutting and the unexpected retirement of CEO Brian Ferguson.

Its stock fell as low as $9.11or 11.4 per cent from Monday’s close and down about 48 per cent since it announced in March a $17.7-billion blockbuste­r deal to buy assets from ConocoPhil­lips.

“It has been a trying time for our shareholde­rs,” Ferguson said during a presentati­on to investors in Toronto.

As he has since the deal was announced, Ferguson defended it, saying Cenovus paid “a fair price for top-tier assets.” He said he is confident the company will be able to sell assets to pay down debt before the end of the year and will then further cut costs to generate free cash flow to be returned to shareholde­rs.

Energy analyst Rob Cooper of Acumen Capital said investors are doubtful that Cenovus has the ex- pertise to develop the Alberta and B.C. Deep Basin assets it has bought from ConocoPhil­lips, nor does he believe the company will get the price it wants in asset sales given current low oil prices.

The fact that Cenovus announced Ferguson’s departure without naming a successor suggests a “repudiatio­n” of his strategy, Cooper added.

Ferguson, 60, has led Calgary-based Cenovus since its launch as a public company in December 2009.

He will retire as CEO and from the board of directors on Oct. 31. He plans to stay as an adviser until the end of March.

The company’s focus since splitting from Encana, where Ferguson was the chief financial officer, has been mainly on oilsands production in Western Canada. It also has nonoperati­ng interests in two U.S. refineries.

It said it is working toward selling between $4 billion and $5 billion of assets by year-end, up from its previous plans to raise at least $3.6 billion to pay off a loan in that amount.

It now aims to sell its non-oilsands assets including Pelican Lake, Suffield, Weyburn and Palliser, which together produce about 112,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day.

Cenovus said it also intends to cut up to an additional $1 billion in costs over the next three years.

About half of the savings are expected from efficienci­es from its increased size and redesigned drilling techniques.

The company also unveiled a fiveyear plan to grow free-funds flow by 14 per cent per year and production at a 6-per-cent compound annual growth rate if benchmark U.S. oil prices average $55 (U.S.) per barrel. On Tuesday, that price hovered around the $43 mark, the lowest it’s been since November.

Ferguson said the company will “throttle back” convention­al oil and gas capital spending if the price stays in the $40-$45 range for a prolonged period.

The company is working toward selling between $4 billion and $5 billion of assets by year-end

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cenovus Energy CEO Brian Ferguson has led the Calgary-based firm since its launch as an independen­t public company in late 2009.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Cenovus Energy CEO Brian Ferguson has led the Calgary-based firm since its launch as an independen­t public company in late 2009.

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