A XM não fornece serviços a residentes nos Estados Unidos da América.

Shell’s value gap is more strategy than geography



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>RPT-BREAKINGVIEWS-Shell’s value gap is more strategy than geography</title></head><body>

The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.

By Yawen Chen

LONDON, April 19 (Reuters Breakingviews) -It is generally a good thing when a chief executive worries about his company’s share price. The danger is seeking superficial fixes. Ever since Shell SHEL.L CEO Wael Sawan took charge last year, he has made it his mission to close the $230 billion oil giant’s valuation gap with U.S. rivals like Exxon Mobil XOM.N. If his efforts fail to produce results by 2025, however, he has threatened to consider “all options” including shifting the UK-based company’s primary listing to the United States, he told Bloomberg last week. The problem is that Shell’s value gap is due to more than just geography.

Sawan is not alone in wondering whether his company’s domicile is weighing on its value. In the past few years, a growing band of companies, including plumbing parts specialist Ferguson FERG.N and online gambling group Flutter Entertainment FLUT.N have switched their stock market listings from London to New York in search of a different shareholder base and higher multiples. A transatlantic switch for Shell would be on a different scale, though: it is currently the largest company listed in the United Kingdom, accounting for over 9% of the benchmark FTSE 100 Index .FTSE.

It is easy to understand Sawan’s valuation frustration. All big oil groups produce a fungible commodity which trades in a global market. And though European groups including Shell have traditionally traded at a discount to U.S. oil giants, the gap has widened in recent years. In 2018, for example, Shell’s value including debt was around 6 times expected EBITDA for the next 12 months, according to LSEG data, while Exxon was valued at 7 times. The European group now trades at a 4 times multiple, while its $470 billion U.S. rival is on 6 times.

To explain the difference, start with strategy. In the past few years, oil groups have faced mounting pressure from investors and regulators to diversify their businesses and prepare for declining demand for the black stuff. But while many European executives acknowledged a future with less oil, American bosses like Exxon’s Darren Woods have been less willing to shift.

Ben van Beurden, Sawan’s predecessor at Shell, invested heavily in the energy transition, pouring cash into wind and solar power, biofuels, hydrogen, and charging points for electric vehicles. While his successor has pulled back from renewable energy as higher interest rates depressed returns, Shell still invested around 20% of its cash capital spending on low-carbon assets in 2023. By contrast, Exxon spent about 2% on low-carbon solutions that primarily focused on capturing and storing carbon emissions.

Differing priorities in allocating capital are also evident in oil, which remains the companies’ most lucrative activity and their main source of earnings. In 2021, Shell decided to aim for an expected reduction in oil production of around 1% to 2% each year until 2030, including divestments and the natural decline of existing oil fields. While Sawan retired that goal last year, he still expects Shell’s total oil and gas production in 2030 to be roughly the same as in 2022.

Meanwhile, Bernstein analysts expect Exxon’s total production to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 6% over the same period. The analysts expect Exxon’s oil output alone to grow at a 7% compound rate thanks to investments in Guyana and its recent $60 billion takeover of Pioneer Natural Resources PXD.N, which boosts growth in U.S. shale. As a result, analysts expect Exxon to report EBITDA of $80 billion in 2025, 8% more than last year, while Shell’s EBITDA will decline by 10% over the same period, according to forecasts compiled by LSEG.

This divergence matters to investors in oil companies because earnings underpin those companies’ ability to pay dividends and buy back stock. European groups have proved themselves less dependable on this front by slashing payouts after oil prices collapsed during the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2020, Shell more than halved its annual dividend to $7 billion; Exxon kept its distribution to investors steady at $15 billion.

Companies like Shell and its British rival BP BP.L have also been less strategically consistent. Under van Beurden, for example, Shell planned a big push into chemical products, only to unwind many of those investments due to poor returns.

While Sawan has focused on cutting costs and improving shareholder returns, investors are so far not giving him much credit. Shell’s free cash flow yield – the cash a company generates after capital spending, divided by its market value – is currently 12%, against 7% for Exxon, LSEG estimates show.

It is true that European oil companies face other specific factors that lessen their attraction in the eyes of investors. The continent generally has more punishing taxes for fossil fuel producers, while its lenders are more reluctant to finance oil groups.

Still, on balance switching Shell’s listing to the United States would not close the valuation gap. Indeed, the company’s highly liquid stock can easily be bought by U.S. fund managers in London or through American Depositary Receipts traded in New York. While Shell’s shareholder structure is highly fragmented, among its top 100 investors – who hold around a third of the company’s stock – over 40% is already held by U.S. investors.

One transatlantic difference is that U.S. investors have in recent years cooled on allocating capital according to environmental considerations, while European money managers are still more likely to consider a company’s green credentials. If Sawan wanted to shift Shell’s strategy more aggressively in the direction of pumping more oil, he might therefore find a more receptive investor base in the United States.

However, tapping into those investors would require a big effort and considerable risk. In order to be eligible for U.S. benchmarks like the S&P 500 Index .SPX, Shell would not only have to move its primary listing stateside, but also shift its head office and senior executives. The company would have to switch from international to U.S. accounting standards. And Sawan would have to persuade three-quarters of Shell’s current shareholders to approve the move, even though index-tracking funds would be forced to sell when the company dropped out of the FTSE 100 benchmark. The benefits of moving would also take time to flow through. For example, the $43 billion Ferguson, which moved its primary listing to the United States in 2022, is still waiting to join the S&P 500 Index.

Sawan’s frustration with his company’s valuation gap is understandable. But the reasons for the divergence defy a superficial fix.

Follow @ywchen1 on X


CONTEXT NEWS

Shell’s Chief Executive Wael Sawan said he would have to “look at all options” including switching the group’s listing to New York if efforts to close a valuation gap with U.S. rivals Exxon Mobil and Chevron in a ten-quarter “sprint” from its last capital markets day in June 2023 don’t work, Bloomberg Opinion said on April 8, citing an interview with Sawan in March.

Ben van Beurden, former Shell CEO and Sawan’s predecessor, said Shell is “massively undervalued” in London and may benefit from switching its listing to the U.S., the Financial Times quoted him as saying on April 9.


Graphic: European majors’ earnings growth lags US peers https://reut.rs/3UksUxg

Graphic: Shell and Exxon’s valuation discount widened https://reut.rs/3W2hQpJ


Editing by Peter Thal Larsen, George Hay and Oliver Taslic

</body></html>

Isenção de Responsabilidade: As entidades do XM Group proporcionam serviço de apenas-execução e acesso à nossa plataforma online de negociação, permitindo a visualização e/ou uso do conteúdo disponível no website ou através deste, o que não se destina a alterar ou a expandir o supracitado. Tal acesso e uso estão sempre sujeitos a: (i) Termos e Condições; (ii) Avisos de Risco; e (iii) Termos de Responsabilidade. Este, é desta forma, fornecido como informação generalizada. Particularmente, por favor esteja ciente que os conteúdos da nossa plataforma online de negociação não constituem solicitação ou oferta para iniciar qualquer transação nos mercados financeiros. Negociar em qualquer mercado financeiro envolve um nível de risco significativo de perda do capital.

Todo o material publicado na nossa plataforma de negociação online tem apenas objetivos educacionais/informativos e não contém — e não deve ser considerado conter — conselhos e recomendações financeiras, de negociação ou fiscalidade de investimentos, registo de preços de negociação, oferta e solicitação de transação em qualquer instrumento financeiro ou promoção financeira não solicitada direcionadas a si.

Qual conteúdo obtido por uma terceira parte, assim como o conteúdo preparado pela XM, tais como, opiniões, pesquisa, análises, preços, outra informação ou links para websites de terceiras partes contidos neste website são prestados "no estado em que se encontram", como um comentário de mercado generalizado e não constitui conselho de investimento. Na medida em que qualquer conteúdo é construído como pesquisa de investimento, deve considerar e aceitar que este não tem como objetivo e nem foi preparado de acordo com os requisitos legais concebidos para promover a independência da pesquisa de investimento, desta forma, deve ser considerado material de marketing sob as leis e regulações relevantes. Por favor, certifique-se que leu e compreendeu a nossa Notificação sobre Pesquisa de Investimento não-independente e o Aviso de Risco, relativos à informação supracitada, os quais podem ser acedidos aqui.

Aviso de risco: O seu capital está em risco. Os produtos alavancados podem não ser adequados para todos. Recomendamos que consulte a nossa Divulgação de Riscos.