- Dividends Better than Stock Buybacks?
- Connecticut and Energy Conservation
- Mexico, the Election and Peak Oil
- So Much for an Active Hurricane Season?
- Weaver’s Cove LNG Tanker Route
- Venezuela, Chavez and His China Gift Bag
- Japan and the Java Refinery
- LNG Security Lapse Hurts Utilities
Note: Musings from the Oil Patch reflects an eclectic collection of stories and analyses dealing with issues and developments within the energy industry that I feel have potentially significant implications for executives operating oilfield service companies. The newsletter currently anticipates a semi-monthly publishing schedule, but periodically the event and news flow may dictate a more frequent schedule. As always, I welcome your comments and observations. Allen Brooks
Dividends Better than Stock Buybacks?
An article in the August issue of CFO magazine discussed the impact of dividends versus stock buybacks as a use of corporate cash flow. Over the past seven quarters, companies making up the Standard & Poor’s 500 index spent over $630 billion buying back their shares. Those repurchases equaled about 5.5% of the total market capitalization of the index as of
In the fourth quarter of 2005, S&P companies repurchased a record $104 billion worth of shares, up from the prior quarterly record of $82 billion. That record was surpassed in the latest quarter as the companies spent $116 billion, a 43% increase over the comparable 2005 second quarter. Big companies are spending as much on stock buybacks are they are on capital expenditures. They have also increased their dividend payments, but the dividend yield is falling as earnings per share are growing faster. Howard Silverblatt, S&P’s senior index analyst, said the volume of stock buybacks is unprecedented. “We’ve never had this magnitude of buybacks.”
According to management consulting firm, Bain & Company, companies use stock buybacks to:
- “Build investor confidence and shareholder loyalty:
- “Increase earnings per share and return on equity;
- “Obtain company assets at bargain values;
- “Boost share price by signaling that the stock is undervalued;
- “Increase the company’s debt-equity ratio through shifts in financing structure;
- “Offset dilution effects that are caused by the exercising of employee stock options.”
Interestingly, the Bain people go on to discuss steps in the execution of stock buybacks that raise questions about how they are viewed. According to Bain, the advantages of buybacks over dividends include tax advantages for long-term shareholders and less analyst scrutiny. This last rationale suggests that analysts are less rigorous in examining management pledges versus their actions.
Bain also points out that managements need to manage shareholder and investor opinion, which requires developing a coherent rationale that convinces interested parties in the merit of the buyback program. A reason for this requirement is that investors have learned that buyback announcements often become phantom transactions. That experience has made Wall Street more jaundiced in its view of stock buyback announcements, plus the repurchased shares are seldom cancelled, thus remaining as treasury stock that can be viewed as a potential share overhang.
While stock buybacks appear to be growing, in light of the continuing buildup in cash on corporate balance sheets, dividends aren’t nearly as popular. Even after the 2003 tax cuts on capital gains and dividends, the ratio of dividends to earnings (dividend payout) is close to its lowest level since the late 19th century. According to Peter Bernstein writing in the CFA Institute’s Financial Analyst Journal last spring, the 2005 dividend payout ratio was 29%. Historically, this rate has been much higher. During 1950-1989, it averaged 50% and never went below 38% – its lowest point touched in 1979 when there was a jump in oil earnings. So why are dividends the Rodney Dangerfield of investing?
Stock buybacks are tax deferred unless you sell your shares, in contrast to dividends that are taxed at 15%. Of course that assumes the share price rises to reflect the reduction in share count. Stock buybacks are one-off transactions and don’t establish investor expectations of more buybacks. Dividends, on the other hand, establish expectations that can be destroyed should the company ever reduce its cash payout. Wall Street bankers like stock buybacks since they generate transaction fees. Lastly, investors assume that stock buybacks are a better way of boosting the share price, since reducing the number of outstanding shares raises earnings per share.
Changing demographics and market conditions are creating a large group of investors that are beginning to demand more income-producing stocks. Even after the Fed has raised short term interest rates 17 times, bond yields are not dramatically superior to solid dividend-paying stocks. One needs to only look at the growing popularity of real estate investment trusts, master limited partnerships and Canadian income trusts to judge the growing demand by investors for increased income. This trend may be driven by Baby Boomers entering or nearing retirement who are re-adjusting their portfolios away from growth stocks and in favor of current income vehicles as they seek more cash for living expenses.
Can establishing or boosting dividend payouts actually help share price performance? According to Standard & Poor’s, since 1926, dividends have accounted for 41.1% of the total return of the S&P 500 index. The stock market performance of dividend-paying stocks further confirms the positive benefit of this method of returning cash to shareholders. From
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) recently examined more than 300 cases in which companies announced large dividends or large stock buybacks. The BCG study showed that after two quarters, the dividend announcements had produced a median 23% boost in the company’s price to earnings ratio relative to the S&P 500 average. In contrast, the stock buyback group generated a negative 0.6% return over the same time period. According to Eric Olsen, a senior vice president of BCG, “There’s very strong statistical evidence that dividends increase P/E multiples. But we haven’t seen any evidence that buybacks move P/E multiples.”
A study by the Ned Davis Research firm found that from 1940 to 2005, dividend-paying stocks outperformed the overall stock market. Companies in the S&P 500 index paying regular dividends returned over 10% annually, compared with just 4% for those that didn’t. The message from this study is that dividends signal management’s view of its future. Because dividends are hard to reverse, you don’t announce them or boost them unless you feel confident that you can pay them again and again and again. From this perspective, stock buybacks do not carry the same message.
A 2003 study by Clifford A. Asness and Robert D. Arnott, principals of AQR Capital Management and Research Affiliates, respectively, found that the size of a company’s dividend is a good predictor of its future earnings. The study showed that the bigger the dividend, the higher the earnings. This conclusion is contrary to common wisdom, which holds that a growth company serves its shareholders best by plowing its earnings back into the business. The rationalization is that dividends force capital discipline on managers.
The Wall Street Journal pointed out that in 2003 when the stock market surged, dividend-paying stocks in the S&P 500 index were trounced by non-dividend stocks that were helped by rebounding technology stocks. However, since then the dividend-paying stocks have performed better. In 2005, the dividend-payers in the S&P 500 index posted a total return of 9.3% versus the 8.2% return of the non-dividend-payers. This year, through August 24, the gap widened dramatically as dividend-payers returned 5.1% compared to 0.9% for non-dividend-payers.
Energy companies have been among the lowest dividend payers. The rationale is that the cyclical nature of the energy business dictates that management should always husband cash for the next downturn in the industry’s fortunes. The boom-bust nature of this industry has been fostered by the significant spending increases undertaken to add capacity in periods of commodity price upturns just prior to a weakening in demand. However, capital discipline would suggest that companies should be ramping up their capital investment in periods of commodity price weakness when input prices are lower. Moreover, stock buybacks provide the best return for a corporation when its share price is low, not after it has climbed to record highs after three years. As commodity prices climb, tortoise-like managements quickly morph into hares, usually to the disappointment of investors. Maybe dividends and stock buybacks need to be re-thought.
Connecticut and Energy Conservation
In the cause of energy conservation, Connecticut State Sen. Thomas P. Gaffey (D-Meriden) will introduce a bill into the General Assembly when it reconvenes in January to reduce the superhighway speed limit to 55 miles per hour (mph) from 70. Sen. Gaffey says that cars perform better at 55 mph saving consumers gasoline and thus costs, important in this period of high gasoline prices. Once again we are witnessing government’s attempt to usurp the role of free markets in determining how people should live their lives and spend their income.
It is interesting to note that speed alone is not the major cause of traffic accidents, although that is not the primary reason for this new legislation. The major accident problem associated with speed is differential speeds on the same road such as when people driving 70 mph overtake people driving at 50. Addressing this problem is a highway design issue. Reducing speed limits at specific locations is the preferred way to deal with this problem rather than a blanket reduction in highway speed limits.
It is interesting to note how
In the face of reduced highway speeds, drivers are unlikely to observe the lower limit, just as they did not observe the 55-mph limit in the 1970s. So is the reduction in the speed limit merely another revenue-raising scheme, whereby police are enabled to set speed traps and impose expensive fines at will, the more so now that
Mexico , the Election and Peak Oil
In July,
On August 28, a court, reviewing the fraud charges over the election results that had ordered a recounting of nine percent (11,839) of the ballot boxes, indicated that most of the fraud charges were being thrown out. Reportedly, Mr. Calderon lost a total of 4,183 votes from his narrow victory margin, but reportedly all the candidates lost votes in the recount. According to a report prepared by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Mr. Calderon lost 81,080 votes compared to Mr. Obrador’s 76,897, resulting in the net loss figure. Given its analysis that at least half the Mexican ballot boxes had either over- or under-counting errors, it believes there are grounds for a total vote recount, something the court has rejected. The court has until September 6 to certify the election.
Since the morning after the election, Mr. Obrador has urged his supporters to challenge the result with rallies and demonstrations in
Unfortunately for the next government, its reliance on income from state oil company Pemex to both fund the government and provide money for social programs may be vulnerable to Peak Oil. High oil prices and greater production have boosted revenues for Pemex and income for the government. Currently, over 60% of Pemex’s revenues go to the government in taxes. In addition, the Mexican government takes 39.2% of the revenues between the budgeted sales price for Pemex’s oil and its actual sales price. In addition, 8% of Pemex’s revenues go to pay its pension expense. As a result of its huge tax and social spending drain, Pemex has to rely on outside funding for its capital investment, which has hurt the company’s ability to replace reserves and sustain, or grow, the country’s oil production. At the present time, Pemex has $45 billion of debt.
Recently, Pemex announced it is reactivating development of a mature oil field in the
The new production is part of Pemex’s response to confronting its Peak Oil challenge. The Cantarell field, that accounts for two-thirds of the
Exhibit 1. Mexico’s Production Lagging Capex Growth
Source: EIA, Pemex, PPHB
As Pemex struggles with how to find and develop new oil and gas reserves, its cash flow lifeblood is being drained by the government, limiting the company’s ability to reinvest. If
Mid September may prove an important time to judge how the political left deals with the new government and potentially deteriorating economic and social conditions.
So Much for an Active Hurricane Season?
On the one-year anniversary of the arrival of Hurricane Katrina that virtually ripped New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast off the face of the earth, tropical storm Ernesto grew into the first hurricane of the 2006 season. This hurricane season initially was projected to be almost as active as 2005’s record season. However, as we went through a quiet early part of the season, full year expectations are being scaled back by the primary hurricane forecasters and now they are not so sure that we will have an active season.
Exhibit 2.
Source: Accuweather.com
Based on history, the late August/early September time period is the most active period for tropical storm and hurricane formation. The pattern of the past two years shows an even distribution of tropical storms and hurricanes formed prior to and then after August 26. If this pattern holds for the balance of the 2006 season, we may be treated to a significantly lower number of storms than are forecast. That said, it only takes one intense hurricane hitting the
Florida in 1992, and later damaged the Gulf of Mexico oil and gas producing infrastructure, was the first hurricane of that season, and it did not form until August 14 and didn’t hit the United States until August 22.
Exhibit 3. Calm Hurricane Season Not Unusual
Source: NOAA, New York Times, PPHB
After last year’s unusual hurricane activity, climatologists and hurricane forecasters stepped up their battle over whether global warming is the cause for the increased intensity of the storms being experienced. The calm hurricane season so far has intensified this debate. By using different time periods, and with different academic backgrounds, the interpretation of the climate and hurricane data leads to different conclusions. The heightened attention to this issue following hurricanes Katrina and Rita last year and $3 a gallon gasoline prices has been reinforced this year by former vice president Al Gore’s documentary film “An Inconvenient Truth.” The film suggests that last year’s storms were the result of a broader climate trend clearly traceable to global warming. That view was recently reinforced by environmentalist Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, who called the 350,000 Katrina evacuees who will not return home “the world’s first climate refugees.”
We have written about many of the pros and cons of the climate and hurricane studies, but they keep coming and intensify the debate. The most recent articles argue over the quality of the climate data being used to forecast hurricanes and the amount of data analyzed. Dr. Christopher Landsea of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Hurricane Research Division published an opinion piece in the journal Science in July in which he argued that studies indicating that recent hurricanes have become more intense than those in the past may be based on flawed data. He pointed out that wind and temperature measurement technologies were less sophisticated and less extensive in the past and may have underestimated the strength of earlier storms.
In addition, there have been debates over the number of storms and hurricanes that occurred each year in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, the most recent historic period when
Two papers have investigated the thesis about atmospheric temperatures and
Phillip Klotzbach of
Behind much of this debate lays billions of dollars of federal funding for climate change, global warming and hurricane prediction research. We are not suggesting that academic research is being driven purely by the availability of federal research grants, but this growing pile of available cash in a world of shrinking federal and state funding of higher education can be a strong agent fanning the debate. The more shrill the plea, the greater the funding.
We remember that in the mid 1970s, the academic debate was about the coming ice age, when it wasn’t preoccupied with trying to figure out how the world was going to support the exploding global population. In our view, politicians are only too happy to fund this type of research. Studies seeking solutions to broad global issues postpone the day that the politicians must vote on specific actions that may possibly harm their constituents. Regardless of whether we have more or no hurricanes in the second half of this storm season, this climate debate will rage on. Hopefully, the debate will not be as William Shakespeare put it, “Life is a tale told by an idiot – full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
Weaver’s Cove LNG Tanker Route
Two weeks ago, my wife and I, along with her cousin and his wife, boarded a Rhode Island Fast Ferry for a tour of the lighthouses of
One objection to the LNG terminal is that restrictions on vessels being within the security zone surrounding an LNG tanker would disrupt recreational activity on
Exhibit 4.
Source: Yahoo Maps
On our voyage, we saw fewer than a dozen recreational vessels between the Claiborne Pell (
Exhibit 5.
Source: Betty Brooks
On our trip, one thing we did observe was a windmill, located at a monastery. The sight of it brought to mind the battles over the
As we looked at this lone
Exhibit 6. Lone
Source: Betty Brooks
As expected, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced several deals following his August 22-25 trip to
While these transactions were anticipated, they represent additional pieces of the puzzle for Hugo Chavez’s strategy to move his oil industry away from total dependence on the
The purchase of 18 new oil tankers may signal that PdVSA is planning to ship the expanding oil supply to
Exhibit 7.
Source: Mapquest
Stratfor.com suggests that the only way
We believe the laws of physics are applicable with respect to
Japan and the Java Refinery
In the last issue of Musings, we discussed the announcement of a new refinery venture between
On August 28, as Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi left for a 4-day tour of Central Asia, he said that his country relies too much on the
LNG Security Lapse Hurts Utilities
In mid August, two intruders, using wire cutters, broke into the KeySpan Corp. (KSE-NYSE) LNG facility in
Further raising concern is that in June, 15 undocumented immigrants working for a cleaning subcontractor were arrested after they took a shortcut through the ExxonMobil LNG facility in
Contact PPHB:
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Main Tel: (713) 621-8100
Main Fax: (713) 621-8166
www.pphb.com
Parks Paton Hoepfl & Brown is an independent investment banking firm providing financial advisory services, including merger and acquisition and capital raising assistance, exclusively to clients in the energy service industry.