26 April 2024
Post-crash consolidation: Hazy outlook or a fait accompli?
Publication date: 30 April 2020
Gas Strategies Group
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It takes courage to challenge conventional wisdom. Conventional wisdom would say that as soon as we have shoots of recovery in the oil market, M&A will be back on the agendas of management committees. We only need look at the previous oil price crises for evidence. In the crash of 1997-1998 mega mergers created the oil majors as we know them today and in 2015-2017, private equity firms launched a buying spree of companies and assets. Once the worst of the current storm battering oil and financial markets passes, conditions should be ripe:
However, if there has ever been a time to challenge conventional wisdom, that time is surely now.
Lenders cooling on the sector
The growing wave of bankruptcies of US shale companies that were running on high yield debt is likely the thin end of a wedge of defaults across the spectrum of creditworthiness. The combination of supply side shock and recessionary demand reduction is already filtering through to debt pricing as lenders evaluate the possibility of increased defaults and of low prices persisting for some time. For those pushing through deals that began before the meltdown, financing terms have changed. In a world of presumed 70% leverage on transactions, this has a real impact on returns and valuations. Without a change in the conditions, this will likely continue and with it a partial freeze on deal flow as valuation gaps between sellers and buyers remain too wide.
Another barrier to financing is the accessing of liquidity by “blue chip” oil companies tapping into credit facilities such as revolvers, limiting funds available to others in a credit constrained world. Our conversations with a number of clients and industry stakeholders have raised concerns over timely access to debt being a constraint on transaction activity in the near-term.
The end of accepted wisdom on price decks
Secondly, how will the stakeholders across the transaction space – lenders, sellers. acquirers and advisors - account for the uncertainty generated by the current three-headed (interdependent) monster of Covid-19, the collapse in oil and gas prices and a likely global recession? Previous oil price crashes have shown that transaction activity increases 9-12 months following the crash owing to improvement in prices and increased stability in the forward view. However, we are not entering a “normal” world and trying to map out recovery pathways for price and demand at the moment is like trying to catch a falling knife.
In the project finance market, we have been seen first-hand the negotiations between projects and lenders on oil prices. Where there has previously been a general consensus on long-term oil prices for financing cases, this accepted wisdom is now really challenged. On the M&A side, historically low prices for oil and gas will also force a rethink on price decks and could keep sellers out of the market while they wait for an improvement, at least for as long as they can. Furthermore, the existential threat of the energy transition cannot be discounted – the range of possible outcomes on the transition, and therefore price and demand pathways, has now increased due to the diverse recovery pathways from Covid-19.
This increased uncertainty will indeed add to the risk profile for lenders and constrain the willingness to lend.
Mapping the impacts
Taking these above, we see a number of impacts as this plays out over the next 12 months.
Whilst there can’t be many certainties in today’s world, we are increasingly sure that this crisis won’t be like last oil price crash, or like the last financial crash. For now, the market seems to share our view that we won’t see a strong pipeline of deals – credit challenges and market turbulence are too high. Navigating through this requires a careful consideration of the above factors and a search to challenge that conventional wisdom.
[1] https://ijglobal.com/articles/146853/blackrock-closes-energy-fund-above-... [1]
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