In the past two weeks, the likes of BP Plc, Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc have said they will increase share buybacks and payouts, confident the worst of the coronavirus pandemic is over. The rise in commodities — crude’s up around 40% this year — is bolstering their bottom lines even as some scale back on exploration and new production.
It’s different for Aramco. The company, based in Dhahran in eastern Saudi Arabia, kept its payout unchanged last year, even as oil prices plunged and it needed to sell debt to meet the commitment.
Still, with oil’s turnaround, that payout now looks less attractive relative to major rivals. Aramco’s indicated dividend yield is roughly 4%, while BP, Chevron and Exxon Mobil Corp. all pay above 5%.
“We’ll advise later this year whether we’ll be sticking to the ordinary dividend or doing otherwise,” Ziad al-Murshed, Aramco’s chief financial officer, told reporters on Sunday, as the company announced a net profit of $25.5 billion for the second quarter. Free cash flow rose to $22.6 billion, above the the firm’s quarterly dividend of $18.8 billion for the first time since the start of the pandemic.
“We have a clear pecking order for our cash,” al-Murshed said. “We start with sustaining capital, then move to paying the ordinary dividend.”
Paying more money to shareholders is the last on a list of priorities along with reducing debt, which remains above the company’s self-imposed target.
Production Boost
While some Western firms have pledged to cut new exploration as part of a push to lower carbon emissions, the Saudi government has tasked Aramco with pumping more oil.
The company expects to spend $35 billion this year on capital expenditure. Some of that will be spent on increasing daily oil-production capacity to 13 million barrels from 12 million.
“We are seeing good signs of global recovery in energy demand,” Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser said. “With less investment that we see from other producers globally, this creates an opportunity.”