HomeNewsOpinionBig oil’s buyback bonanza for investors has a sustainability issue

Big oil’s buyback bonanza for investors has a sustainability issue

The industry has enjoyed a bonanza leading to bumper payouts to shareholders via buybacks, but sustainability remains in question

September 10, 2024 / 11:45 IST
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When John D Rockefeller wanted to punish a rival, he cut prices to force them to operate at a loss. The father of the modern oil industry had a name for it: a “good sweating.” A century later, OPEC+ is giving Big Oil the modern equivalent of Rockefeller’s time-tested tactics. Not everyone will be fit enough for it.

For the last two-and-a-half years, Big Oil has enjoyed a bonanza, profiting from the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and OPEC+’s tight control of the market. High prices inflated cash generation, leading to bumper payouts to shareholders — via, above all, buybacks.

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But the tailwind has now turned into a headwind, and the size of the group’s share repurchases will drop, probably from 2025 onward.

Jefferies Financial Group Inc, an investment bank, has warned that at current forward prices for next year, half of the international oil companies “can’t sustain their distribution” without taking more debt.