Total Plans $5 Bln in Asset Sales

By Bate Felix
Thursday, July 25, 2019

French energy giant Total will sell around $5 billion worth of assets, mostly from its upstream exploration and production business, as it seeks to focus on low breakeven projects that can weather weak oil prices, it said on Thursday.

The company reported a 19% year-on-year drop in adjusted net profit to $2.9 billion in the second quarter, which it attributed to a combination of unfavorable market factors.

These include a 7% drop in oil prices since the second quarter of 2018, a sharp fall in gas prices, and a slide in refining margins.

"Markets remained volatile with Brent averaging $69 per barrel in the second quarter - an increase of 9% compared to the previous quarter - but natural gas prices down 36% in Europe and 26% in Asia," Chairman and Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanne said.

The company, which has carried out a spree of acquisitions and expansion plans particularly in gas and electricity under Pouyanne, said it was preparing for the future by focusing on its core strengths in the gas and deep offshore segments.

Although gas prices fell sharply, Total said operating cash flow before working capital changes in its gas, renewables and power business surged 42% thanks to 8% production growth and a 10% increase in liquefied natural gas (LNG) sales.

Total's shares on the Paris bourse were flat at 0933 GMT.

Asset Sale
Total said the focused strategy would be complemented by the sale of assets that only break even at high oil and gas prices, such as the recent disposal of mature assets in the British North Sea. Its organic pre-dividend breakeven is below $25 per barrel, while the organic post-dividend breakeven - which would allow it pay dividends and carry out investments - is below $50 a barrel.

"This active portfolio management policy will continue with the sale of $5 billion in assets over the 2019-20 period, the majority coming from Exploration and Production," Pouyanne said.

Analysts said Total's results were in line with market expectations.

"The announcement of the asset sales may help to offset some uncertainty around the recent growth and M&A strategy, demonstrating some ongoing discipline around the balance sheet and upstream portfolio," Barenberg analyst Henry Tarr said in a note.

Barenberg has a "buy" rating on Total.

The company maintained its 2019 organic investment target of around $14 billion. Norwegian peer Equinor said on Thursday it will cut 2019 spending.

Total said the global oil environment remained volatile at the start of the third quarter, with uncertainty about demand growth.

Its European refining margins, while still volatile, increased early in the third quarter and its downstream business should benefit from restarting the Grandpuits refinery in France and the Leuna refinery in Germany.

In the oil industry upstream operations cover crude oil production, while downstream activities can include refining, sales and shipping.

Total said output growth should surpass 9% this year thanks to the ramp-up of projects started in 2018 and the launch of the Kaombo Sul project in Angola, Culzean in Britain's North Sea, and the upcoming Johan Sverdrup scheme in Norway and Iara 1 in Brazil.

It rewarded shareholders by increasing its second interim dividend by 3.1% from last year's level to 0.66 euros per share, and bought back $760 million of its shares.


(Reporting by Bate Felix; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Leigh Thomas and Jan Harvey)

Categories: Finance Energy Mergers & Acquisitions Industry News Production

Related Stories

MODEC Forms Dedicated Mooring Solutions Unit

Seatrium Maintains $12.8B Order Book on Renewables and FPSO Progress

Eneos Warns on Skyrocketing Costs fo Offshore Wind

Major Oil and Gas Projects Drive Strong OSV Demand in the Middle East

PTTEP Orders OneSubsea Systems for Two Deepwater Projects off Malaysia

US Pressure on India Could Propel Russia's Shadow Oil Exports

Vietsovpetro Brings BK-24 Oil Platform Online Two Months Early

Norwegian Oil Investment Will Peak in '25

CNOOC Brings New Offshore Gas Field On Stream

China Starts Production at Major Oil Field in Bohai Sea

Current News

MODEC Forms Dedicated Mooring Solutions Unit

Seatrium Maintains $12.8B Order Book on Renewables and FPSO Progress

Petrobras’ New FPSO Sets Sail From South Korea to Brazil's Santos Basin

Eneos Warns on Skyrocketing Costs fo Offshore Wind

Mooreast to Assess Feasibility of Floating Renewables Push in Timor-Leste

Malaysia Issues First Offshore CCS Permit to Petronas Subsidiary

Sponsored: Record Deals and Record Attendance Underscore ADIPEC’s Global Impact

Sponsored: Energy and Finance Chiefs Call for Sound Policy, Stable Frameworks at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Energy Sector Urged to Scale AI Adoption at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Policy, AI, and Capital Take Center Stage at ADIPEC 2025

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