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EXCLUSIVE-Exxon Mobil breaks with past, bulks up energy trading to boost profit

Tue, 12th Jun 2018 15:42

(Adds details about Exxon and rivals' trading)

By Liz Hampton, Ernest Scheyder and Dmitry Zhdannikov

HOUSTON/LONDON, June 12 (Reuters) - Exxon Mobil Corpis pushing deeper into energy trading, building a global cadreof experienced traders and beefing up risk-management systems tolift profit, according to executive recruiters and peoplefamiliar with the business.

The development is a sea change for a company that has stoodout from rivals by limiting its past activity out of concern itwould be accused of market manipulation. Exxon now aims to tradearound more of its growing energy assets to get the best pricesfor its products and increase earnings, according to an employeefamiliar with the matter.

Expanded trading could add hundreds of millions of dollarsto annual earnings from its own buying and selling of crude andfuels, but also comes with problems, including higher risk.Exxon expects to add 1 million barrels per day of outputover the next several years as new oilfields and refineryexpansions kick in, giving it more assets to trade.

Exxon last year retained John Masek, a former trader atSwiss-based Glencore, the world's second largest buyerand seller of petroleum, to consult on gasoline trading. Earlierthis year, it poached four gasoline market specialists fromrefiner Phillips 66.

This month, Exxon hired former BHP Billiton Plctrader Nelson Lee as an international crude trader, the peoplefamiliar with the matter said. In 2014, Lee orchestrated BHP'sfirst-ever crude exports by maintaining the lightly refined oilmet criteria for an exportable product. The deals helped usherin the end to a U.S. prohibition on crude exports more than ayear later.

The company has also added crude, products and liquefiednatural gas specialists to London and Singapore offices. Itrecently hired Paul Butcher, a trader who has worked at BP Plc, Glencore and Vitol, to advise on North Seamarkets and accounting for trading transactions.

"Paul is known for being a very aggressive, old school crudetrader. Exxon would have never hired a risk taker of that scalein the old days. The fact that he is consulting them shows theyare considering changes in trading very seriously," said atrading house executive who knows Butcher.

Phillips 66 declined to comment on the employee departures.

Exxon spokesman Scott Silvestri referred questions about itstrading business and recent hiring to regulatory filings, whichnote the historical use of financial derivatives and geographicscale to manage commodity price risks.

LIMITED RISK

Chief Executive Darren Woods wants to increase Exxon'sprofit and appetite for risk at a measured pace, according topeople who deal with Exxon. The U.S. operation runs from atrading floor at its Spring, Texas campus that has expanded toas many as 70 workers who will handle everything from Canadiancrude to gasoline, jet fuel and diesel.

"Trading has been a virtual four-letter word at Exxon," saidEhud Ronn, a University of Texas finance professor who studiesenergy and financial risk management. Exxon has drawn most topmanagers from engineering backgrounds, not financial services."A change in their trading policy would indeed betransformational."

Exxon has long lagged behind rivals BP Plc, ChevronCorp and Royal Dutch Shell Plc, which havecreated trading units that occasionally generate more profitthan their refining businesses.

During the oil price downturn of 2015-2016, companies likeShell often made more profit in refining than in oilproduction, also known as upstream, and often cited trading ascontributing to the success of the refining division.

Shell for example trades more than 8 million barrels per dayor 8 percent of global production, twice the size of its own orExxon's output. The huge figures come partially thanks totrading barrels of third parties, which Exxon currently does ona very limited scale.

Exxon would also normally hedge only cargoes going from oneregion to another and where crude is priced according todifferent benchmarks. BP and Shell would normally hedge allcargoes as well as taking sometimes a pure speculative positionon the paper market to make profit, according to traders workingfor the firms.

"Exxon still doesn't plan to begin speculative papertrading," said one source familiar with Exxon's thinking.

Woods faces pressure from Exxon investors to lift sharesthat trade at the same price as 10 years ago. He promisedshareholders this year that he can double profit and increaseits oil and gas output by 25 percent by 2025.

The company's expanded focus on trading brings challengesincluding added risk from options, swaps and other derivatives,and developing risk-management and compensation systems for thelarger business.

Exxon has held talks with at least two developers ofrisk-management software, Enuit LLC and Allegro DevelopmentCorp, people familiar with the discussions said. Both offerpackages that manage logistics and measure financial exposure.The companies declined to comment on their discussions withExxon, according to spokespeople.

Exxon has also put company veteran managers in charge ofoverall trading and risk controls at its Spring, Texas, floor,one person familiar with its operations said, to avoid potentiallosses as it expands trading.

"We've heard whispers in the market about this for a fewyears, so it's great to see them finally hiring commercialtalent externally," said an executive recruiter familiar withsome of the recent hires but who was not directly involved.(Additional reporting by Ron Bousso in London and HenningGloystein in Singapore; Writing by Gary McWilliams; Editing byRichard Pullin/Adrian Croft)

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