Muscat Daily

Occidental surprises investors again with Qatar lease loss

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Houston, US - Occidental Petroleum Corp dropped the most in over a year after deciding to hand over an oil field in Qatar to the government, an announceme­nt that appeared to catch some investors off-guard.

The stock fell 6.1 per cent to US$72.24 on Monday, making it the worst performer in the S&P 500 Index, after Houston-based Occidental confirmed it will walk away from the 100,000-barrela-day Idd El-Shargi North Dome field next year when its 25-year lease expires.

It’s the second time in just over two months that the company has surprised shareholde­rs. Occidental also plunged in August after announcing a US$1.1bn hike to its capital spending budget to keep pace with rivals and maintain its position as the biggest oil producer in the Permian Basin.

For several years now, Occidental has sold foreign assets and invested less abroad in order to focus on the world’s fastest- growing major oil region in its own backyard. But while the company has made its overall strategy clear, the wider investment community appeared to be caught unprepared by the Qatar decision, according to Leo Mariani, an Austin-based analyst at NatAllianc­e Securities LLC.

“Most energy specialist­s were generally aware but Oxy is a widely held stock by generalist investors so that may have caught some people by surprise,” he said in a phone interview.

The move also stands in contrast to previous comments from Occidental. Speaking in September last year, CEO Vicki Hollub described the field’s ‘excellent performanc­e’ and said the company had started talking with Qatar about extending its contract. Occidental disclosed that the field’s lease will expire in 2019 in its 10-K filing in February.

The company said in a statement on Monday that the Qatar field needed major infrastruc­ture investment, and that the asset’s annual free cash flow would drop by 77 per cent to an average of US$70mn over the next five years.

The field’s management and operation will be taken over by state-owned Qatar Petroleum, which first announced the decision on Sunday. The field represents about four per cent of Occidental’s worldwide output, according to NatAllianc­e Securities LLC.

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