Chevron pulls out of Australian shale

A man fills his car with gasoline at a Chevron Corp. fueling station in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Friday, April 25, 2014. Chevron Corp. is expected to release earning figures on May 2. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

A man fills his car with gasoline at a Chevron Corp. fueling station in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Friday, April 25, 2014. Chevron Corp. is expected to release earning figures on May 2. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Published Mar 30, 2015

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James Paton, Brett Foley and Joe Carroll Sydney

CHEVRON abandoned Australian shale exploration and said it would sell its 50 percent stake in that nation’s largest oil refiner.

Chevron notified Beach Energy, its partner in the central Australian shale project, that “the opportunity does not align strategically” with the US explorer’s portfolio, according to a statement on Friday from Beach. Selling its half of refiner Caltex Australia is expected to yield about A$4.7 billion (R43.8bn.)

Chevron announced plans earlier this month to shed $15bn (R180.5bn) in oil and natural gas assets by the end of 2017 and reduce spending on new projects for the next two years.

Chairman and chief executive John Watson is raising cash and curbing expenditures after the plunge in global oil prices dented profits and made some fields less attractive to drill.

“They are perhaps looking to increase their margins and get away from businesses that offer lower-end margins,” said David Lennox, a resource analyst at Fat Prophets in Sydney. “They are getting knocked around a bit,” by oil prices.

Chevron entered Australian shale two years ago when it pledged to invest $349 million in Beach’s Nappamerri Trough gas project. Beach said on Friday that it would seek other partners.

Chevron has been trimming its refining portfolio for the past decade to focus on higher-margin investments such as oil drilling. The company sold about $14bn in refineries, filling stations and related assets between 2004 and the end of last year.

Discount

Chevron was selling its shares in Caltex Australia at A$35 a piece, a 7.6 percent discount to Friday’s close, people said.

The deal underwritten by Goldman Sachs is the largest block trade ever in Australia, exceeding Royal Dutch Shell’s sale of Woodside Petroleum shares in 2010 for about A$3.3bn, according to data.

So-called cornerstone investors agreed to buy about A$2bn of the Caltex stock before the offering started, the people said, asking not to be identified.

Caltex, the biggest Australian-based refiner, has risen 74 percent in Sydney in the past 12 months. It closed on Friday at A$37.88.

Chevron expected to sell the shares in Caltex to a broad range of Australian and global institutional investors, the San Ramon, California-based company said on Friday.

In the Asia-Pacific region that includes Australia, Chevron’s net cash refining margins were less than $1 a barrel during the last four years, compared with more than $6 at its North American plants.

The moves will have no impact on Chevron’s Gorgon and Wheatstone gas-export projects in the country, the company said. –

Bloomberg

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