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Canadian Natural Resources Ltd T.CNQ

Alternate Symbol(s):  CNQ

Canadian Natural Resources Limited is a Canada-based independent crude oil and natural gas exploration, development and production company. The Company's segments include exploration and production, oil sands mining and upgrading, and midstream and refining. The exploration and production segment are focused on North America, specifically in Western Canada; the United Kingdom portion of the North Sea, and Cote d'Ivoire and South Africa in Offshore Africa. Its Oil Sands Mining and Upgrading segment produces synthetic crude oil through bitumen mining and upgrading operations at Horizon Oil Sands and through its direct and indirect interest in the Athabasca Oil Sands Project. Within Western Canada in the Midstream and Refining segment, the Company maintains certain activities that include pipeline operations, an electricity co-generation system and an investment in the Northwest Redwater Partnership, a general partnership formed to upgrade and refine bitumen in the Province of Alberta.


TSX:CNQ - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Oct 21, 2024 8:42am
182 Views
Post# 36274419

RBC Notes

RBC Notes

October 21, 2024

Energy Insights
Exploring 2025 WTI Breakevens

Our view: As our Global Oil Strategist, Brian Leisen argues in Expedition Log—Pick Your Battles, OPEC non-compliance and non-OPEC production growth have put the global oil market in an oversupplied state and contributed to soft pricing conditions. By our yardstick, the average WTI price in 2025 required to cover estimated total capital expenditures and base dividends across our global coverage group sits at about $60—with one-half our coverage in the $50s. The reengineered model many energy producers have embraced revolves around enhanced financial resiliency (via net debt reduction) and shareholder return optionality (with an accent on flexible buybacks), building a bigger moat around base dividends. Still, as Exhibit 1 illustrates, some producers would be wise to undertake proactive steps today to drive down their breakevens.

A $60 average—but many producers in the $50s. By our analysis, the average WTI price in 2025 required to cover estimated total capital expenditures and base dividends across our global coverage group sits at about $60. This average is a touch higher than we originally envisioned, but as Exhibit 1 illustrates, more than one-half our coverage falls below $60 with many companies in the $50s. We have also incorporated gas-weighted companies in this analysis for completeness, while noting that results can be distorted on relative pricing ratios, combined with the exclusion of hedging.

Reengineered financial resiliency. As we argued in By the Numbers and Life at $50, balance sheets across our global coverage group have deleveraged substantially since the pandemic and producers are well equipped to ride out inevitable commodity price cycles. Accordingly, while flexible share buybacks would temporarily compress should oil prices soften, common share dividends appear relatively well insulated for most producers.

If WTI pulls back substantially, capital and WTI breakevens will likely follow. Our 2025 analysis leaves capital investment and operating costs unchanged, but in reality, we would expect energy producers (especially on the smaller end of the spectrum) to respond rapidly to oil price softness by trimming their growth investment to partially insulate shareholder returns and limit net debt growth. That would suggest that WTI breakevens would come in lower than our figures.

Energy Best Ideas. Despite choppy oil markets, we continue to favour upstream oil-weighted producers that possess the ingredients framed above. Please see our RBC Global Energy Best Ideas list, published October 1, for a rundown of our top picks within our global coverage group. Our favourite producers globally include Shell in Europe, Chord Energy in the US, and Canadian Natural Resources, Suncor Energy, ARC Resources and Tourmaline in Canada



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