Tullow Oil Returns to Net Profit

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Africa-focused Tullow Oil reported its first annual net profit in five years on Wednesday and said it would resume dividends with a 4.8 cent per share payout as it sets its sights on East African projects and drilling in Guyana.

As flagged in November, Tullow will pay out at least $100 million to shareholders from this year, while aiming to shrink its $3.1 billion debt and increase spending to $570 million.

The largest chunk of that money will help increase output in Ghana, which sets Tullow on course to raise output to 102,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boed) this year from 90,000 boed.

Tullow made a post-tax profit of $85 million on $1.9 billion in revenue last year, buoyed by higher oil prices and cost discipline.

A $208 million payment after selling a stake in its Uganda onshore fields to Total was delayed last year because the country asked for more tax on the deal than expected.

Tullow on Wednesday said it had now agreed on the principles of the tax arrangement. Chief Executive Officer Paul McDade told Reuters he expected to pay less than the $167 million initially asked for by the government, which will pave the way for the final go-ahead on its Ugandan project in mid-year.

Barclays analysts said in a note they expected the tax payment to be around $85 million.

"Placed alongside the announced dividend payment ... we think (the initial tax deal in Uganda) is a positive update and shares should outperform the sector today," JP Morgan said in a note.

In Kenya, Tullow reiterated it saw a final investment decision by year-end.

Milestones to pass first include commercial and financing arrangements for two pipelines planned to carry oil from the onshore fields to the Indian Ocean coast.

In Uganda, Tullow anticipates finalising commercial and land agreements in the first half.

In Kenya, Tullow expects commercial framework agreements from the government and deals over land acquisition for the 800 km pipeline and oilfield infrastructure in the first quarter.

In Guyana, Tullow plans to drill the Jethro prospect in the second quarter as the first of two planned wells on the Orinduik block.

It hedged just under 60,000 bopd for 2019 at a floor price of $56.24 per barrel and 25,000 bopd of its 2020 production $59.00 per barrel.


(Reporting by Shadia Nasralla; editing by Jason Neely)

Categories: Finance Energy Industry News Africa

Related Stories

Jadestone Secures Gas Sales Deal for Fields Offshore Vietnam

Oil Flows to Lag Even if Hormuz Strait Reopens

Pertamina Unit to Operate Indonesia’s Lavender Block under 30-Year PSC

TotalEnergies Eyes Black Sea Exploration with Türkiye’s TPAO

IEA Cuts Oil Demand, Supply Outlook Amid Iran War

Philippines Seeks US Extension to Buy Russian Oil

China Calls for De-Escalation as US Threatens Hormuz Blockade

Oil Surges Over 7% to Above $102 Ahead of US Hormuz Blockade

Oil Shoots Over $110 as Trump's Iran Deadline Looms

Eni: New Gas Discoveries in Libya

Current News

US-Israel War on Iran Creates Biggest Energy Crisis in History

Jadestone Secures Gas Sales Deal for Fields Offshore Vietnam

Oil Flows to Lag Even if Hormuz Strait Reopens

Eni Makes Major Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

Strike Threat Grows at Ichthys LNG after Workers Reject Deal

Pertamina Unit to Operate Indonesia’s Lavender Block under 30-Year PSC

MidEast Energy Output Recovery to Take Two Years, IEA Says

Metropolitan CCS Cleared to Drill CO2 Storage Wells off Japan

Saipem Bags $400M in Offshore Contracts from Aramco in Saudi Arabia

Toyo, OneSubsea Form Subsea CCS Partnership

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com