An offshore oil platform is seen at the Bouri Oil Field off the coast of Libya August 3, 2015.Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters
European oil companies had the best weekly performance in seven years as they added about $86-billion (U.S.) in value following crude's surge this week.
The 23-member Stoxx Europe 600 Oil & Gas index climbed 11 per cent this week, the most since November, 2008. Tullow Oil PLC, which operates oilfields in Africa, was the best performer with a 33-per-cent increase while Royal Dutch Shell PLC's A shares in London advanced 13 per cent, also their biggest weekly gain in seven years.
Oil rebounded this week with the U.S. benchmark going past $50 (U.S.) for the first time since July as output from the world's biggest consumer drops and Shell and Pacific Investment Management Co. said the worst may be over. That helped make energy companies the best performing industry group in the MSCI World index this week after languishing at the bottom for most of this year.
"The stocks have been oversold over the past year and that's helping the rally now," Jason Kenney, European head of oil and gas equity research at Banco Santander SA, said by phone from Edinburgh. "Question is where will oil prices settle now? Investors think oil companies can weather the storm because they've got so many levers to pull."
Even before crude slumped to a six-year low in August, oil companies were in the midst of programs to slash spending, halt projects and reduce their work forces to preserve cash and protect their balance sheets. Producers have deferred more than $200-billion of projects over the past 15 months, according to consultant Wood Mackenzie Ltd.
BP PLC reduced its spending forecast for this year to less than $20-billion after investing about $23-billion in 2014. Shell is cutting 6,500 jobs and plans to lower spending by $7-billion. U.S. explorers have idled more than half the country's oil rigs since last October.
"The higher share prices recently are because investors see the big oil companies delivering on their promise of cutting costs," said Pedro Antonio Merino Garcia, chief economist at Repsol SA, Spain's biggest oil producer, which has gained 15 per cent this week. "Investors had oversold earlier, afraid of the outlook for oil prices. Over the last few days, they're more confident regarding oil supply and demand," he said earlier this week in London.
Shell's chief executive officer Ben Van Beurden was the first among oil majors' bosses to say this week he saw signs of a recovery. Cutting investment in oil exploration and production by a record 20 per cent this year will eventually reduce or eliminate oversupply, International Energy Agency executive-director Fatih Birol said in London earlier this week. The industry will defer more major projects again next year, according to Ali Moshiri, Chevron Corp.'s president of exploration and production in Latin America and Africa.
Chevron, the second-biggest U.S. oil company, has gained 9.8 per cent this week, heading for the best performance since December, 2014. Exxon Mobil Corp., the world's biggest oil company by market value, has climbed 4.5 per cent.
Services companies, among the worst affected as oil slumped, returned more than 18 per cent in Europe over the week, with shares of Petrofac Ltd. making a record weekly gain of almost 27 per cent. Norway's Aker Solutions ASA had its best weekly performance since at least October last year, soaring 24 per cent.
Oil may rise to a "baseline" of about $60 a barrel in one year's time as the impact of supply cuts becomes more evident from early 2016, Greg Sharenow, an executive vice-president at Pimco, said in an e-mail. U.S. crude output is down about 440,000 barrels a day from a four-decade high of 9.61 million barrels in June.
Still, companies remain cautious after a rally earlier this year was short lived. While production cuts may help draw a line under the rout, prices are set to remain "lower for longer" because of excess inventories, according to Pimco, which manages $15-billion of commodity assets.
"People could be thinking, how much worse can it get from here, so there's a rotation from short positions to long," Michael Powell, a managing director of investment banking at Barclays PLC, said in London this week. "Then you ask, is this the spring of this year all over again?"