Conoco-Phillips
COP discussed business environment that they are operating in. OECD demand is flat – growth from Middle East, China and India. Resource nationalization and heightened competition to continue. They are still bullish on oil prices.
Demand to grow to 120 million barrels a day by 2030 – COP can’t see industry meeting that demand.
Cost of new supply is driving prices higher in oil markets.
Natural gas – COP has always contested the estimate of the amount of LNG that will be imported to U.S. – see Europe getting a lot of it - thus the see a robust market for Natural Gas in the U.S.
Strategic Objectives
To be competitive with peers on Cash and income per BOE.
Debt rate 20-25%
65-70% - E and P
20-25% - R and M
5% - everything else.
Production – 2% long term growth rate.
5 year reserve replacement - 100%
Downstream investments being made are not to add capacity but to improve ability to refine heavier crude.
Encana venture – they have no refineries so traded an interest in a refinery for some of their properties.
Lukoil – COP owns 20% of Lukoil – value is double what COP paid for them.
Financial Strategy – aggressive share repurchase, competitive distributions, enhanced per share metrics.
Return on Capital Employed – used purchase accounting to buy Burlington and since Natural gas prices were low after purchase, this affected ROCE. If you use cash based metrics, then they are better.
Bought $ 5 billion in shares in last two quarters of 2007 – this leaves $10 billion left in authorization – this strategy boosts per share metrics.
Showing posts with label COP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COP. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Conoco Phillips (COP) at Howard Weil
Posted by
TJF
at
9:25 AM
0
comments
Labels: Conoco- Phillips, COP, Howard Weil
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)