3 Energy Market Developments To Watch As Oil Prices Rise

 | Mar 14, 2019 20:04

As geopolitics and transportation disasters impact the oil and fuels markets, some oil company CEOs seem most concerned with climate change and environmentalism. For oil and equities traders, the new corporate strategies are something to watch.h2 1. Oil Majors Divided Over Strategy/h2

Oil majors are divided over strategies to attract investors. Low oil prices have put a dent in their profits over the past few years, while some oil majors, like BP (NYSE:BP), Equinor (NYSE:EQNR) and Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDSa) believe that they have lost investor confidence because they are not adequately addressing climate change. BP and Equinor believe that engaging with potential investors on climate change issues and oil’s contribution to climate change will improve their image. It is questionable whether adopting a strategy of repeatedly questioning the morality of the entire hydrocarbons business will be good for investor confidence and stock prices.

Royal Dutch Shell is essentially re-envisioning itself as a power company instead of an oil company. It's seeking to become the “world’s largest power company” by the beginning of the 2030s. Shell has been selling off a great deal of its upstream oil assets, and it is buying renewable energy assets instead. In fact, Shell is in the process of bidding to build wind farms in the North Sea. Margins for electricity providers are typically much lower than for oil companies, so it's not certain if, as a power company, Shell will be able to achieve the 8%-12% returns it is looking for.

Other oil majors, such as Hess (NYSE:HES), Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) are focusing more on traditional aspects. Hess CEO John Hess recently talked about selling off upstream assets with high production costs. Chevron and Exxon are both expanding drilling in the Permian region where they have good access to pipelines and shipping.

h2 2. Oil Production And Sanctions/h2

Oil prices rose yesterday after reports that production growth in the Permian region was overestimated in December, January and February.