Shell's CEO Seeks to Lure Investors Back to Oil Sector -- WSJ
June 06 2019 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Timothy Puko
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (June 6, 2019).
Anglo-Dutch oil giant Royal Dutch Shell PLC can be both a cash
cow and a company trying to meet the challenge of climate
change.
That is Chief Executive Ben van Beurden's sales pitch as he
meets with investors and analysts in London and New York this
week.
Shell is slowly transforming into a cleaner business centered on
selling electricity. But in the years to come, it aims to pay
billions of dollars back to investors -- at least $125 billion in
dividends and share buybacks between 2021 and 2025 alone -- all of
it from traditional parts of the oil business.
All those payouts will come from returns on investments the
company has already made, Mr. van Beurden said in an interview with
The Wall Street Journal.
Oil and gas production, retail gasoline, lubricants, trading and
chemicals will be the company's biggest source of cash.
Mr. van Beurden is trying to lure investors back to the sector
when, he said, i nvestors are "really waking up" to the problem of
climate change. Shell expects it will be decades before it can even
halve the carbon emissions from its businesses and products. Any
decline in the oil business is at least a decade away, Mr. van
Beurden said.
And it will take just as long before investments in a cleaner
electricity business produce a return.
"For decades and decades to come, the industry will have to
invest in [oil and gas] in order to basically supply demand, which
will be there," Mr. van Beurden said. "And as long as we feel we
can have competitive positions, as long as we feel we can do that
in an environmentally competitive way, a low-carbon way, etc., sure
we will want to participate."
It is a challenging time in the oil business. As the effects
from climate change grow, they have brought scrutiny from
regulators around the world and some politicians in the U.S. aiming
to cut carbon emissions or even more directly shrink the
oil-and-gas industry.
Shell has been at the vanguard of large oil companies,
especially European-based obnes, that have vowed to change to cut
emissions.
But that change often involves transforming the business
entirely or relying on technologies yet to exist. Many investors
have begun to wonder whether the oil industry might simply die,
while environmentalists have criticized even the most progressive
oil companies for failing to evolve fast enough.
Mr. van Beurden said some of that criticism is misleading. He
defended Shell's investment in zero-carbon energy as
wide-ranging.
The company has purchased a utility, an electric-car charging
business and a stake in a solar-power company, he said. Still,
those electricity businesses will take several years before they
can become an equal part of Shell's portfolio along with oil, gas
and chemicals.
"We better prove that first before we start putting billions and
billions and billions of dollars in it....It needs to be a gentle
takeoff process," he said. "When we prove out that this business
model that we have -- which is a business model of a future green
utility -- actually works, yes, then we are going to step seriously
on the accelerator."
Investors have shown little excitement for the pitch. Shell's
shares are up about 1.5% this week, trailing broader market gains.
They are also down about 20% over five years and largely flat for
the past 18 months.
Investors have a dour view of oil more broadly, Mr. van Beurden
said in a subsequent interview on Wednesday on CNBC.
Low oil prices troubled many companies in recent years, and now
investors have near-term concerns about global economic growth
along with long-term fears about crude demand.
That is why Shell keeps escalating the shareholder payouts from
its traditional oil business, Mr. van Beurden said.
"The sector at this time is still a little bit in the doghouse,"
he said in the CNBC interview. "At some point in time fundamentals
are going to reassert themselves and people are going to say 'Hey,
if I get that type of yield on my investment, I better be part of
the growth story that will bring.'"
Write to Timothy Puko at tim.puko@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 06, 2019 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
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