REMINDER: Our focusIR Investor Webinar takes place TONIGHT with guest speakers from WS Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSA.L Share News (RDSA)

  • There is currently no data for RDSA

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UPDATE 4-Vitol pays $2.6 bln for Shell's Australian refinery, petrol stations

Fri, 21st Feb 2014 11:34

* Vitol to keep refinery open, says can run profitably

* Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund to take stake

* Deal helps Shell toward $15 bln asset sales target

By Byron Kaye and Florence Tan

SYDNEY/SINGAPORE, Feb 21 (Reuters) - Top global oil traderVitol SA is buying Royal Dutch Shell's Australian refinery and petrol stations for about $2.6 billionin its biggest acquisition, looking to grab a share of a growingoil product market.

The purchase will pit Swiss-based Vitol against arch rivalTrafigura, which became Australia's largestindependent fuel retailer last year in a market where the lessnimble oil majors are looking to cut losses.

Australia has become one of Asia's biggest fuel importers,creating opportunities for traders as the majors have shutolder, small refineries, under pressure to shift investment tooil and gas production that generates better returns.

The Australian deal puts Shell comfortably on track to hitits target of $15 billion in asset sales over the next twoyears, set by new chief executive Ben van Beurden as part of anausterity drive following a profit warning in January.

So far this year, Shell has sold about $5 billion of assetsand analysts said the swift pace of disposals could prompt thecompany to raise its target.

"The speed at which Shell can sell relatively immaterialassets for billions of dollars highlights how unambitious its$15 billion programme is. We would expect the disposal target tobe raised in due course," Investec analysts said.

Vitol Chief Executive Ian Taylor said he expects to makegood returns from the business eventually, as the refinery,while small, was a high-quality plant, with good distributionchains into the Australian market.

Analysts said the acquisition made sense for Vitol eventhough Shell couldn't run it profitably enough to keep it.

"These two companies have different return expectations andtargets they're willing to accept," said Craig Pirrong,Professor of Finance at the University of Houston.

With the Australian purchase, which includes 870 servicestations plus Shell's bulk fuels, bitumen and chemicalsbusinesses, Vitol is betting Australian fuel demand willcontinue to grow faster than in Europe, and eventually the worldwill be short of refining capacity.

"Longer term, yes, we are making a bet that refining willactually be a cyclically good business. And that's what we'vefound so far, by the way," Taylor told reporters in Melbourne,hours after signing the deal at the refinery in nearby Geelong.

It was also attracted to the country as it has a freemarket, in contrast to other places in Asia where oil productprices are heavily controlled, Taylor said.

He said Vitol would not be interested in a stake in theretail business China's Sinopec Corp has put up forsale.

Shares in Shell traded up 0.2 percent at 1132 GMT, in linewith Britain's bluechip index.

HOTBED FOR TRADERS

Dutch-owned Vitol has refining operations in the United ArabEmirates and Antwerp, and formed a joint venture with privateequity firm Carlyle Group in December called Varo Energyto own refining and distribution assets in Switzerland andGermany.

Taylor confirmed that the Abu Dhabi Investment Councilsovereign fund was part of the group that bought the assets, butdeclined to name other parties who may take an equity stake inthe deal, which is expected to be partly debt funded.

Vitol joined the race for the Australian petrol stationsafter Trafigura's Puma Energy arm bought two fuel distributorslast year.

Others eyeing the market include South Korean refiner S-Oil, which said last month it was in exclusive talks tobuy a stake in Australia's United Petroleum, a privately ownedbusiness valued at about A$1 billion, including debt, thatreceived a number of approaches from international companiesfollowing Puma's takeover of Ausfuel.

Australia's refineries, owned by Shell, BP,ExxonMobil and Caltex, have mostly bookedlosses over several years as tighter fuel quality standards andmega-refineries in Asia have made them uncompetitive.

Rather than spend money on upgrading plants, the majors havebeen looking to sell them or turn them into fuel importterminals. Taylor said Australia was likely to need more fuelterminals in the long run, an opportunity Vitol would look at.

SELL-OFF

Shell, which retains substantial gas interests in Australiaas well as a $7 billion stake in Woodside Petroleum,was making tough choices to improve its overall competitiveness,CEO van Beurden said in a statement.

Analysts and bankers say Shell may consider selling its 23.1 percent stake in Woodside to help meet its $15 billiondisposal target, which equates to about 6 percent of Shell's market value.

The company generated $1.7 billion of divestment proceedslast year.

Earlier this week, Shell offloaded its Italian retailbusiness for an undisclosed price, reported in the Italian pressas to 500 million euros. In January, it also sold a stake in agas project in Western Australia for $1.1 billion and a stake ina Brazilian oil project for $1 billion.

It has already sold downstream assets including refineriesin the UK, Germany, France, Norway and the Czech Republic.

"The new (Shell) management is being ruthless in cutting outanything that they think is extraneous to their core," said AlTroner, President of Asia Pacific Energy Consulting in Houston.

More News
3 Dec 2021 09:44

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies ups SSE, AJ Bell; Deutsche likes BP

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies ups SSE, AJ Bell; Deutsche likes BP

Read more
3 Dec 2021 08:43

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks rebound on oil and travel; US jobs ahead

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks rebound on oil and travel; US jobs ahead

Read more
2 Dec 2021 18:54

UPDATE 2-Shell scraps plans to develop Cambo North Sea oilfield

(Adds detail)By Ron Bousso and Shadia NasrallaLONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Thursday it had scrapped plans to develop the Cambo oilfield in the British North Sea, which became a lightning rod for climate activists seeking to ...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 18:54

UPDATE 1-Shell scraps plans to develop Cambo North Sea oilfield

(Adds Siccar Point statement, background)LONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Thursday it had scrapped plans to develop the Cambo North Sea oilfield, which became a lightning rod for climate activists seeking to halt Britain's devel...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 18:54

UPDATE 3-Shell scraps plans to develop Cambo North Sea oilfield

(Adds investor comment)By Ron Bousso and Shadia NasrallaLONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Thursday it had scrapped plans to develop the Cambo oilfield in the British North Sea, which became a lightning rod for climate activists s...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 18:02

Shell and partner scrap plans to develop North Sea oilfield

LONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell and Siccar Point have decided not to go ahead with the development of the Cambo oilfield in the British North Sea due to a weak economic case, Shell said on Thursday."After comprehensive screening of the...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 17:05

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks fall as Omicron variant fears mount

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks fall as Omicron variant fears mount

Read more
2 Dec 2021 12:03

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Europe hit by Omicron but Wall Street to rebound

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Europe hit by Omicron but Wall Street to rebound

Read more
2 Dec 2021 10:08

UPDATE 2-European stocks fall as Omicron worries rattle investors

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* STOXX 600 gives back a chunk of Wednesdays gains* Apple suppliers hit by report on slowing demand* Vifor Pharma surges on takeover speculat...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 08:31

SSE and Equinor to proceed with $4 bln Dogger Bank C offshore wind farm

OSLO, Dec 2 (Reuters) - British utility SSE and Norwegian energy company Equinor have secured financing to proceed with the construction of the 3 billion pound ($3.98 billion) Dogger Bank C offshore wind farm in Britain, the companies said on Thu...

Read more
2 Dec 2021 07:03

Shell launches $1.5bn buyback from Permian sale

(Sharecast News) - Royal Dutch Shell has launched a $1.5bn share buyback as the first stage of returning cash to shareholders from the sale of its Permian business in the US.

Read more
1 Dec 2021 12:10

German oil lobby seeks net zero CO2 emissions by 2045

FRANKFURT, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Germany's oil industry will aim for net zero carbon emissions by 2045, moving away from fossil fuel to low carbon products such as biofuels and renewable energy-derived hydrogen, the industry's lobby group en2x said on...

Read more
1 Dec 2021 12:10

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: IAG and Whitbread lead Omicron rebound

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: IAG and Whitbread lead Omicron rebound

Read more
1 Dec 2021 08:54

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Omicron fears ease again but uncertainty lingers

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Omicron fears ease again but uncertainty lingers

Read more
30 Nov 2021 17:33

UPDATE 3-U.S. security review stalls sale of Shell Texas refinery to Mexico's Pemex

(Updates with comment from congressman critical of sale)By Erwin SebaHOUSTON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - A U.S. national security review has delayed the sale of Royal Dutch Shell's controlling interest in a Texas refinery to Mexico's national oil company, ...

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.