King of cost cuts,
Pouyanne readies Total for new growth era
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[February 14, 2017]
By Bate Felix and Ron Bousso
PARIS/LONDON
(Reuters) - When Patrick Pouyanne took over as the head of Total's <TOTF.PA>
loss-making refinery division in 2011, he demanded a breakdown of costs
for every single unit.
He was told such details didn't exist.
Frustrated, he sent his lieutenants to produce numbers showing which
units of the French oil major were performing well and which needed
urgent cost cuts to stop hemorrhaging profit.
Brutal cost-cutting became Pouyanne's trademark and has served him well
ever since - he turned around the refining unit, more than doubling net
income in just three years.
Today Pouyanne, who took over as Total's chief executive in 2014, is
emerging from the worst oil price slump in a generation with his firm
making more money than any of its peers except its much larger rival,
U.S. oil giant ExxonMobil <XOM.N>.
Pouyanne's relentless fight to cut costs has earned him respect from
investors who want to see strong results in a poor market while pressing
him for future growth plans.
"We are happy with Total's progression. Lower cash flow breakeven is a
good thing and it is good to see they are progressing with new project
development and defending future growth," said Jonathan Waghorn, fund
manager at London-based Guinness Asset Management, which holds shares in
Total.
Pouyanne, 53, was propelled to the helm of France's top listed firm
after his predecessor, Christophe de Margerie, died in a plane crash in
Moscow.
De Margerie, a bon vivant with connections to the French aristocracy and
political elite, was widely seen as an ideal chief for the boom times as
he won huge projects with big budgets.
But as oil prices collapsed soon after Pouyanne took over, the
rugby-loving giant - he is 1.91-metre (six foot three inches) tall - was
forced quietly to abandon de Margerie's "high-risk, high-reward"
exploration strategy, in which the firm had poured $10 billion in a
fruitless effort to find new reserves.
For Jason Kenney, an equity analyst at Santander, Pouyanne's big
achievement was to bring about a quick change of course at Total while
preserving de Margerie's good relations with many nations.
"Pouyanne has built on these foundations but has brought a prudent
commercial sense to the business that has helped see it through two very
tough years - and strengthened Total to make it more 'future proof' than
peers - with a differentiated growth and profitability outlook," Kenney
said.
FLURRY OF PROJECTS
A key distinction between Total and its peers became evident last week
when it reported $8.2 billion in adjusted net income for 2016 - almost
on a par with Exxon, a company producing twice as much oil and gas as
Total.
The figure came well ahead of much larger peers Shell <RDS.a.L> and
Chevron <CVX.N>, which reported $7.2 billion and $1.8 billion
respectively. Total also became the only major oil firm to raise its
dividend over the past year.
According to Thomson Reuters data, five analysts currently rate Total as
a "strong buy", 14 analysts a "buy" and 11 analysts a "hold". Only rival
BP is rated slightly higher.
Total's shares, up around 24 percent over the last year, remain around
10 percent below their price on June 19, 2014, when the oil price
peaked, but have outperformed peers like Chevron, Exxon and ENI <ENI.MI>
over that period.
Like BP, Total has impressed the market with a record number of new
partnerships and acquisitions over the past year - in an effort to make
sure it doesn't run out of profitable projects.
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Total Chief Executive Officer Patrick Pouyanne attends an economic
forum in Paris, France, December 1, 2016. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen
But unlike BP, which irked the market this month by raising its
breakeven oil price to $60 per barrel, Total is expected to break even
at $50 including dividend, according to UBS.
During a year when oil prices crashed as low as $27 per barrel - down
from over $100 in 2014 - Total went big after some projects as Pouyanne
predicted the world would face a major oil shortage by 2020.
Total won the rights for Mexican oil blocks, bought U.S. gas assets from
Chesapeake <CHK.N>, started Laggan Tormore, a major field in the UK
North Sea, agreed to invest in gas in Azerbaijan and bought into oil
fields in Brazil, Qatar and Uganda.
"This is the right opportunity to launch new projects," Pouyanne, who
worked for Total in Angola and Qatar, said this month while pledging
moves on 10 new projects within 18 months.
RISKS IN PROJECT DELAYS
So far Pouyanne has been effectively harvesting results of giant
projects launched under de Margerie several years ago.
For Jason Gammel, analyst at Jefferies, it means that one of the key
risks for cost-obsessed Pouyanne will be in his ability to deliver on
projects on time to preserve current output growth of over 4-5 percent -
far above its peers.
"Delays in the start-up of the company's major projects, such as was the
case with Total's giant Laggan Tormore gas field in the North Sea, are
one of the biggest dangers to the stock," said Gammel who has a "hold"
rating on Total.
Other risks include a further sharp fall in gas prices - of all new
projects, Pouyanne has put a clear emphasis on low-cost gas and
renewables developments.
"Whether we like it or not, the share of oil in the energy mix will
decline by 2040, gas will increase and renewables will also climb
sharply," Pouyanne said in January.
Longer term, Total aims to have 35-40 percent of its portfolio in oil
compared to around 48 percent today, some 40-50 percent in gas and up to
20 percent in renewables and low carbon energies compared to 3-4 percent
today.
If that drive involves political risks, Pouyanne has proven he can be a
risk-taker - he agreed to stick with de Margerie's $20 billion Russian
Yamal gas project despite Western sanctions.
Last year, Total also agreed a $1 billion gas deal with Iran, becoming
the first major to return to the country after the easing of Western
sanctions despite pledges from U.S. President Donald Trump to take a
tougher stance towards Tehran.
Pouyanne was paid 3 million euros in 2015, less than Shell's Ben van
Beurden's remuneration of 5.14 million euros or BP's Bob Dudley's $19.6
million.
But Pouyanne can rival many of his peers for political connections. Son
of a customs officer, he graduated from France's most prestigious Ecole
Polytechnique college to become adviser to ex-Prime Minister Edouard
Balladur.
He later became chief of staff to ex-Premier Francois Fillon, whose
campaign for this year's French presidential election has run into
trouble after prosecutors opened an investigation into alleged payments
made to his wife for a suspected fake job.
(Editing by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Adrian Croft)
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