作为全球四大会计事务所之一,德勤近期对全球油气公司高管们进行了采访,并对即将到来的2017年油气业发展形势作出预测,情况究竟如何呢?让我们跟着他们的最新报告来了解一下。
根据德勤最近发布的一份年度调查报告,石油业持续两年的低迷期可能即将结束,约59%的油气专业人士认为,行业复苏已经开始或将于2017年开始。虽然当前各大油气公司仍以控制成本为第一要务,但高管们仍对行业复苏充满信心。受访者们预计,油价回升、投资和雇员增加可能在不久的将来成为现实。
行业复苏在即
德勤副总裁兼美国及美洲油气领导人John England称,本轮复苏与美国经济大萧条后的复苏在很多方面非常相似。如果2016年是油企业艰难抉择的一年,那2017年将是缓慢走向复苏的一年。油气公司普遍看好明年油价将持续上涨至合理的水平;然而,他们也清楚地意识到,即使油价有所回升,行业完全复苏还要等到2018年或更晚。
德勤调查显示,大多数油气上中下游受访者预计明年投资将会增加。事实上,受低迷油价影响最大的上游产业对复苏最为乐观,其次是中游。此项研究还报道了一些油气行业领导者对行业发展的独到见解。
油气价格上涨
大多数高管认为,60美元/桶的油价是美国油气勘探和生产活动复苏的重要界限。71%的专业人士认为,2016年油价平均维持在40-60美元/桶,或者到年底将上涨更高(61%)。几乎一半的受访者认为油价将继续上涨,到2017年(44%)或到2020年(46%)将达60-80美元/桶。接近三分之一的受访者(28%)预测WTI和布伦特油价将在2020年回到80-100美元/桶。
同时,大众对2017-2020年天然气价格非常乐观。70%的受访者预计在此期间天然气价格会保持在2.50-3.50美元/百万英热,有1/3预计2017年价格将保持在此区间。受访者预计,到2016–2020年末,亚洲天然气价格将远远高于Henry Hub天然气价格,这将为美国LNG出口创造更多商机。在行业专业人士调查来看,81%认为国际天然气价格将趋于5-10美元/百万英热。然而,也有29%持相对乐观看法的人认为,2017-2020年的天然气价格将在10-15美元/百万英热。
复苏隐忧尚存
当然,还有很多未知因素也可能影响整个行业的复苏。当被问及哪些政策或地缘政治问题将对油企影响最大时,45%的受访者称OPEC产量计划对油气行业上游影响最大,排在第二的是美国税收和能源政策,后者对油企的影响超过了其他一些突出的国际问题。可见,专业人士仍然最关心OPEC对油价的持续影响。其次,最令人关注的是美国的税收政策和法律法规(38%)以及环境和地方利益相关者问题(34%)等方面的变化情况。但具体哪方面的法规及影响如何,只有在11月份美国总统大选尘埃落定之后方可知晓。
上游
油气上游正以乐观的心态积极应对挑战。研究结果表明,关于2016-2017年短期和长期成本控制措施的影响预期已有所转变。有50%的受访者认为,作为油气行业从扩张期转向低迷期的重要标志,长期控制成本的举措在2017年给行业带来的影响最大。2017年,短期的成本控制对行业影响较小,这是预示行业复苏的主要标志。
此外,高管们预计2017年勘探活动的投资将增加(42%),这进一步证实了他们对行业长期复苏的信心。50%的受访者认为提高运营效率和油气井生产率是2017年降本的最佳措施,各公司正从裁员、改变投资组合和减少作业活动等举措中寻求转变。虽然有一半以上的受访者认为,40%或更高比例的降本只是短期行为,但64%的人仍认为提高运营效率才是实现可持续降本的最佳途径,其次是能否重新雇用被解雇员工。虽然43%的受访者预计2016年末裁员将继续;然而,只有31%的受访者认为2017年裁员将会持续。
事实上,36%的受访者预计2017年招聘活动将会重启。在2016年,42%的受访者预计投资将继续下降;但43%的受访者预计2017年情况会有所改变,投资将增加,行业复苏指日可待。
中游
再来看看中游产业的情况。德勤能源解决方案中心董事总经理Andrew Slaughter称,之前曾一度认为油价波动不会影响中游产业,但很明显上游收支紧缩的影响已开始向中游蔓延。然而,中游的商务合同正面临着重新谈判或诉诸破产法庭的风险,这将给上游生产商造成巨大的财政压力。我们已看到,越来越多的企业正在考虑业务的整合。专家还称,美国和墨西哥的基础设施建设将是中游企业机会最多的领域。
当然,中游也有自己的挑战和机遇。63%的受访者认为,中游可以从发展迅速的美国LNG出口业务中获得盈利增长的机会,美国墨西哥湾沿岸地区被认为是存在巨大机遇的地区。62%预计2016年企业将进行中度整合,59%认为整合会在2017年进行。中游所面临的最大挑战是降本(52%)和监管(41%)。投资在不断增加,大家对未来充满乐观。只有26%的受访者认为2016年投资在净增长,而41%的人认为2017年投资会增加,其中28%的人认为投资将略微增长10%。
下游
出口机会的增加抵消了下游炼化和销售市场面临的监管顾虑。监管(39%)和成本(35%)问题是油气行业下游面临的最大挑战。尽管挑战重重,但随着美国原油出口带来了新的竞争力,明年成品出口前景仍被看好。33%的受访者指出,2016-2017年投资很可能增加,但年增长率不会超过10%,约有30%的人预期明年净投资将减少。
乐观情绪的回归,在一定程度上反映出油气行业的萧条即将结束,也预示着明年行业将以较低或较平稳的速度增长,而到2020年末才能完全恢复。Slaughter总结称,中游正在寻求扩大原油运输能力并重建基础设施,下游行业正在寻求更多的需求增长。随着乐观情绪的恢复,行业内一些机会的出现指明了未来几年可能的发展方向,而这些机会可能使整个行业重燃生机。
来自/WorldOil 译者/白小明 编辑/王月
HOUSTON — The two-year downturn in the oil and gas industry may be coming to a close. An annual survey released by Deloitte, shows approximately 59% of O&G professionals believe the recovery already has begun or will begin in 2017. While the current state of the market still leaves cost-containment initiatives a priority, executives nonetheless showed renewed confidence in an industry recovery. Those who responded pointed to expectations of rising prices, a return to increasing capital expenditures and headcount as drivers of their optimistic outlook.
“This recovery in many ways mimics the pattern of the recovery from the Great Recession,” said John England, vice chairman, Deloitte LLP and U.S. and Americas Oil and Gas Leader. “If last year was the year of hard decisions, 2017 will be the slow road back. Companies are generally optimistic that prices will rise to a more sustainable level next year; however, they understand that even if we see an uptick in price, the industry likely won’t fully recover until 2018 or beyond.”
Deloitte’s survey reveals that from upstream to downstream, most respondents expect to see an increase in capital expenditures next year. In fact, the upstream sector, which took the hardest hit in this downturn, is the most optimistic about a recovery, followed by the midstream sector. The study also reveals a number of trends in opinion that offer insight into the direction the industry may be headed:
Most executives believe that $60 per bbl is an important threshold for a revival in U.S. oil and gas exploration and production activity. Seventy-one percent of professionals believe it is possible for the 2016 average price per bbl to reach $40-60, or for prices to at least rise to that range by the end of the year (61%). Almost half of the respondents think that prices will continue to rise, reaching $60-80 by 2017 (44%) or by 2020 (46%). Nearly one-third of the respondents (28%) foresee crude oil prices returning to $80-100 for WTI and Brent by 2020.
Natural gas price outlook: Stable to mild optimism for 2017-2020. For 2017-2020, 70% of the respondents expect prices to range between $2.50-3.50 per MMBtu, with a third anticipating this price band in 2017. Survey respondents expect Asian natural gas prices to be much higher than Henry Hub to the end of 2016-2020, which creates opportunity for U.S. LNG exporters. Of professionals surveyed, 81% believe international prices will range from $5-10 per MMBtu. However, an increasingly optimistic view (29%) is for prices to be in the $10-15 per MMBtu range by 2017 to 2020.
X-factors could dampen optimism for recovery. When asked which policy or geopolitical issue would most affect their company, survey respondents cited OPEC production decision as having the most impact on the upstream sector, but U.S. tax and policy decisions are next, outranking several prominent international issues. OPEC’s ongoing influence on crude oil prices remains the most important concern for 45% of professionals. Next areas of greatest concern are changes in U.S. tax policy and regulation (38%) and environmental and local stakeholder issues (34%). While the survey did not break out specific regulations, professionals see a possibility of profound energy policy changes to be enacted, and for the scope and impact of those changes to depend on the outcome of the presidential elections in November 2016.
Upstream priorities: Responding to the challenges, shifting to a recovery mindset. The findings showed a shift in expectation about the impact of short- and long-term cost containment initiatives from 2016-2017. Long-term cost-containment initiatives, a hallmark of the oil and gas industry expansion before the downturn, are considered the most impactful, as shown by an increase from 42% of respondents to 50% for 2017. Short-term cost-reduction efforts are seen as less impactful in 2017 — a key indicator of an expectation of recovery. In addition, executives expect capital expenditures committed to exploration activities to rise in 2017 (42%) — more evidence for an optimistic outlook for the industry’s longer-term recovery. In 2017, 50% of respondents see better operating efficiencies and enhanced well productivity as the biggest opportunity for cost reductions. This is a shift away from head count, portfolio changes and activity reductions. Although more than half of the respondents believe 40% or more of cost reductions are short-term, while 64% see operating efficiency gains as the best path to sustainable cost reductions, followed by contract renegotiations. While 43% of respondents expect more personnel reductions in 2016; next year, only 31% believe there will be ongoing layoffs. In fact, 36% of the respondents expect hiring will restart in 2017. For 2016, 42% expect capital expenditure to continue declining; but, in 2017, the outlook changes as 43% of respondents anticipate capital expenditure to rise in 2017 — optimism for a recovery next year is returning.
The downturn moves to the midstream sector. “Contraction in the upstream sector has begun to wear on the midstream sector, once thought to be somewhat immune from commodity price volatility,” said Andrew Slaughter, managing director of the Deloitte Center for Energy Solutions, Deloitte Services LP. “However, the sector’s fee-based contracts are at risk of being renegotiated or challenged in bankruptcy court, given the financial stress of upstream producers. We already are seeing movement toward consolidation, and more could be on the way. Professionals also see infrastructure building both in the U.S. and in Mexico as the biggest area of midstream opportunity.”
Midstream finds its own set of challenges and its own opportunities. The midstream sector has many opportunities for profitable growth in the burgeoning U.S LNG export industry, and the U.S. Gulf Coast region is seen as the area that will present the most opportunity, according to 63% of respondents. Sixty-two percent expect a moderate level of consolidation in both 2016 and 2017 (59%), but when asked about whether the midstream sector would consolidate significantly in 2017, affirmative responses increased from 15% to 23%. However, midstream limited partnership (MLP) rollups into C-corporation structures were seen as unlikely (28%) or moderate (52%). Cost reduction (52%) and regulation (41%) are seen as the midstream sector’s biggest challenges. Optimism is most clearly seen in the results related to rising capital expenditures. For 2016, only 26% of the respondents saw a net increase in capital expenditures, but that cohort’s expectation rose to 41% for 2017, with 28% of that group citing a modest 10% uptick.
Regulatory challenges for downstream refining and marketing offset by export opportunity. Regulation (39%) and costs (35%) top the list of the biggest challenges facing this highly regulated, capital intensive segment. Despite regulatory challenges, the outlook for refined products exports next year is seen as positive, as U.S. crude oil exports have offered new competition. Capital expenditures will likely increase from 2016 to 2017, according to 33% of survey respondents, but by no more than 10% year over year. Slightly fewer (30%) expect a net capital expenditure reduction next year.
The return of optimistic sentiment indicates that the industry downturn may finally be over, and suggests low to modest industry growth over the next year, with a full recovery by the end of the decade. Slaughter concluded, “The midstream sector is looking to expand its crude oil capabilities and rebuild infrastructure, and the downstream sector is looking for more demand growth. As optimism returns, as it has, the list of opportunities should be given another look, for it shows the direction the industry will likely take in the years to come.”
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