ConocoPhillips (COP) Q2 2006 Earnings Call Transcript
Published at 2006-07-26 19:00:10
Gary Russell - GM of IR Jim Mulva - Chairman, CEO John Carrig - EVP of Finance, CFO
Arjun Murti - Goldman Sachs Jennifer Rowland – JP Morgan John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns Michael Young - Fidelity Investments Doug Terreson - Morgan Stanley Neil McMahon - Sanford Bernstein Doug Leggate - Citigroup Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank Dan Barcelo - Banc of America Securities Gene Gillespie - Howard Weil Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Co. Gene Pisasale - Mercantile Trust Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the ConocoPhillips second quarter earnings conference call. (Operator Instructions). I will now turn the presentation over to your host for today's call, Mr. Gary Russell, General Manager of Investor Relations. Please proceed, sir.
Thanks, Jen. Good morning and welcome to ConocoPhillips second quarter earnings conference call. I'm joined today by Jim Mulva, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; as well as John Carrig, our Executive Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer. The presentation material that we will use today will help us explain the financial and operating performance of our Company during the second quarter of this year. You can find this presentation on our website, www.ConocoPhillips.com. On page 2 you will find our Safe Harbor statement. This statement among other things says that our presentation today, along with responses to your questions, will include forward-looking statements about our current expectations. Our actual results may differ materially from our current expectations. You can find a list of the items that may cause material differences between our current expectations and what actual results will be can be found on our filings with the SEC. So now I'll turn the call over to Jim Mulva.
Gary, thank you. I appreciate all those who have called in for our second quarter earnings conference call. I appreciate your interest in our Company. I'm going to start with my comments on page 3. Looking at page 3 or slide 3 you can see we generated $5.2 billion in net income, $4.8 billion in cash flow from operations. We continued to fund our capital program and other investments in the second quarter and through the first half of the year. So far this year we've affectively reinvested 97% of our income back into our businesses. In addition, we were able to reduce our debt level to $29.5 billion from $32.2 billion as we started the second quarter, so our debt to cap ratio has gone from 30% to 27%. We're pleased with the progress we've made integrating the Burlington Resources operations into our portfolio. As such our second quarter results include the full impact of the Burlington Resource assets for the second quarter. Now looking at the second quarter of 2006 our E&P production, which excludes the LUKOIL segment, was 2.13 million BOE a day, which is higher than the previous quarter as we expected. I'm going to cover more about production in some subsequent slides. Our estimate share of LUKOIL's production for the quarter was 403,000 BOE per day. In refining marketing, our refineries ran at 91% of crude processing capacity, that's up 6% from the prior quarter. We have a subsequent slide on ROCE which is competitive; we'll discuss ROCE a little bit later in the presentation. So I'm going to move now to page 4. This slide shows a sequential quarterly comparison of our net income. A major contributor to the variance between the prior quarter and this quarter is the inclusion of Burlington Resources in the second quarter. Our worldwide realized oil prices and refining margin were higher than the first quarter. However, worldwide realized natural gas prices, along with olefins and polyolefin margins were lower than in the first quarter. The net effect of all of this along with some other market impacts increased our second quarter net income by about $1.2 billion compared to the first quarter. Second quarter net income was positively impacted by about $1.3 billion. This is a result of higher E&P sales volumes, higher volumes in our downstream segment. I'm going to talk more about this in subsequent slides. In addition, the net impact of recent changes in tax legislation in Canada and Texas, they were positive. In Venezuela the tax legislation change is negative. The net effect of all this though improved our second quarter earnings by $376 million. Sequentially, we had higher DD&A and that reduced earnings by about $523 million. Our operating costs were higher by $287 million compared to the previous quarter. I'll talk more about this in subsequent slides. Last, our financing costs were higher as a result of the Burlington acquisition and there were some other minor items that basically offset each other. So the result is, as you can see on the right hand of the slide, net income was approximately $5.2 billion. Now I'm moving on to page 5, total company cash flow. You see we started the quarter with a cash balance of about $3 billion and then we generated $4.8 billion in cash from operations. Our capital spending and investments amounted to $3.6 billion in the quarter. This included the acquisition of 1% of LUKOIL's outstanding stock, and that cost us about $648 million. We paid out $595 million in dividends and then we reduced debt by $2.7 billion. Also, we purchased 6.7 million shares of ConocoPhillips stock in the second quarter at a cost of $425 million. We're on target for completing the $1 billion share buyback program for this year. So after considering the other sources of cash flow we ended the quarter with about $650 million of cash. Moving on to slide 6, which is the capital structure of the Company. Looking at slide 6 you can see we made good progress improving our debt ratio. If you look at the chart on the left you can see equity grew to $79 billion in the second quarter. The balance sheet debt you can see in the middle of the slide is $29.5 billion, so the debt ratio has come from 30% down to 27% at the end of the second quarter. I'm moving now to E&P, exploration and production on page 7. Our worldwide realized oil prices for the quarter were $64.34 a barrel. That's 14% higher than the previous quarter which was $56.63 a barrel. Global realized natural gas prices for the second quarter was $5.85 per MCF, 19% more than the first quarter which was $7.24 per MCF. Our E&P production in the second quarter was up 32.5% mainly due to the addition of the Burlington Resources assets production, and that would be in crude oil [OFBs]. Furthermore, our exploration expenses were $134 million in the second quarter, $22 million higher than the previous quarter but it's somewhat lower than we expected. Moving on to page 8, total company production. You can see on this slide that just illustrates the sequential variance for the second quarter production compared to last quarter. We saw higher BOE output largely due to adding the Burlington Resources assets and then the initial [olefins] that we talked about. We also saw higher production from the ramp up of production in the North Sea and all this increased production that we talked about here in this slide was partially offset by planned maintenance in the United Kingdom and then the impact that the higher crude prices have in terms of our production sharing contract production in Vietnam. There were some other negative impacts to our production in the second quarter which included the seasonal declines that we experienced in Alaska and then the unplanned downtime that we have not only in Alaska but the lower 48 and at Hamaca. When you add 403,000 BOE a day, which is the estimate of the equity share of LUKOIL's production, then all in, the second quarter our production was 2,537,000. Now I'm moving on to net income of E&P, page 9. In the second quarter our E&P net income was $3.3 billion. That's about $750 million more than the previous quarter. Our first quarter results were improved $76 million over the previous quarter mainly due to higher realized crude prices partially offset by lower realized natural gas prices. Burlington Resources' assets contributed $385 million to E&P segment earnings in the second quarter. If you exclude Burlington Resources, sales volumes were lower mainly due to the timing of the liftings. This reduced our quarter-over-quarter earnings by about $19 million. The net impact of recent changes in tax legislation in Canada and Texas which were positive, negative in Venezuela, but the net effect improved our second quarter earnings by $363 million. Then there are some other factors that reduced our second quarter E&P net income as compared to the previous quarter and it included some higher impacts from foreign exchange, and then we wrote off a small amount of the investment we had in the Compass Port LNG facility. Now I'm moving on to refining and marketing on page 10. You can see our worldwide refining margins were quite a bit higher than the previous quarter. In fact, in the second quarter our realized crack spread improved $7.05 a barrel to $17.23 a barrel and our international realized crack spread improved by $2.34 a barrel to $7.64 a barrel. Our U.S. refining system ran at 91% of stated capacity. That's up from the 83% that we had in the first quarter. All of this is a result of some pretty heavy turnaround activity and unplanned downtime in the first quarter as well as in the middle part of April, we turned the Alliance refinery back to normal operations. International refining system ran at 94% of stated capacity which is the same as the first quarter. We're going to discuss turnaround activity and unplanned downtime in another slide. Our turnaround expenses amounted to $115 million pre-tax for the quarter and that's about $48 million lower than the prior quarter. I'm moving on to page 11, net income. As you can see, our net income was quite a bit higher than the previous quarter, up by $1.3 billion. So we had significantly higher worldwide crack spreads and marketing margins along with other market impacts. So it improved our second quarter by about $1.1 billion. Higher volumes improved our earnings $160 million. Several of our refineries which were down in the first quarter for extensive turnaround activity and unplanned downtime returned to normal operations in the second quarter. As I said earlier, our Alliance refinery returned to normal operations in the middle part of April. However, this benefit was partially offset by extended full plant turnaround at the Trainer refinery and then we had unplanned downtime at the Lake Charles and the Humber refineries. So the result was our worldwide crude oil utilization was 91%. The impact of recent changes in tax legislation in Texas helped our second quarter earnings by $34 million. There are some other factors that improved second quarter downstream net income as compared to the previous quarter and it included the lower impacts from foreign exchange partially offset by higher DD&A as a result of having the Wilhelmshaven refineries for a full quarter. Now I'm going to give you some numbers that reflect just what we did in the second quarter by the components of the downstream part of the Company. It is not in a slide, but you might want to jot these numbers down. In the second quarter refining in the United States our net income was $1.484 billion. Our international refining net income was $267 million, so in refining around the world we earned $1.751 billion in the second quarter. Now in marketing in the United States we lost $76 million. In international we earned $17 million. So marketing around the world was a loss of $59 million. But when you add up not only refining and marketing worldwide, but then we have some expenses that held at the corporate part of the downstream part of the business and we have specialty; all-in, everything was $1.708 billion but I wanted to give you the numbers on refining and marketing to help you better understand the components of our downstream earnings in the second quarter. Now I'm moving on to page 12. We increased our equity ownership in LUKOIL by 1%, we're now up to 18% at the end of June. So as a result our average ownership in the second quarter was 17.5%. So our estimated equity earnings for the second quarter from LUKOIL was about $387 million and that's up from the $249 million in the first quarter. This increase is mainly attributed to the benefit from the alignment of our estimates in the fourth quarter of '05 and the first quarter '06 and also to LUKOIL's publicly released results for this time period, but to this true up. Also contributing to the increase was the higher ownership that we had from quarter-to-quarter and our higher estimated sales volumes and higher crude oil prices. So all this contributed to stronger performance from the LUKOIL segment. Now moving on to slide 13 where we talk about our joint ventures in the midstream and chemicals. Our earnings from the midstream business were $108 million in the second quarter, pretty flat with the first quarter. In our chemicals JV our earnings were $103 million, $46 million lower than the first quarter and mainly due to the lower margins that we experienced in the second quarter from olefins and polyolefins. Now with respect to the emerging businesses, the results were $20 million lower than the first quarter mainly due to a write-off of a failed gas turbine at our Sabine River Works cogeneration facility. If we didn't have that, obviously the results would have been much better in the second quarter. Now I'm moving on to page 14 where we take a look at corporate sequentially. The corporate segment impact on net income was a loss of $412 million in the second quarter, and that's $244 million higher than in the first quarter. This is about $50 million higher than the quarterly run rate in the guidance we gave in our first quarter conference call. The difference is primarily one-time transition items and the impact of foreign exchange. Subsequent quarters are expected to be back in line with our previous guidance. The previous guidance and what we're giving now is about $360 million a quarter. Now going back and looking at the second quarter on this slide, the net interest expense was $166 million higher than the previous quarter and it's due to the higher average debt balance resulting from the purchase of Burlington Resources. Furthermore, the Burlington Resources transition costs were $34 million higher than the previous quarter. We had some other factors that impact second quarter results and it generally relates to the impacts of foreign exchange and tax. Now I'm moving on to slide 15, return on capital employed. What this chart shows, first, the green bar is our ROCE for ConocoPhillips, and the shaded area is the ROCE as the numbers are available for the peer group. When we looked to the peer group we look at the largest publicly traded international oil companies: Exxon Mobil, BP, Shell, [Patel] and Chevron. So the bar chart reflects our return with no adjustments for purchase accounting. What we've done is we made adjustments. For our estimate of the pooling benefit that some of this peer group received from past major combinations in determining their ROCE which is shown in the shaded area. So you can see the adjustments that we made we've included in the attachment on table 1. So you can take a look at that. So as you can see on the right bar, our analyzed ROCE for the second quarter of '06 was 19%. This includes the full effect of the Burlington Resources transaction. The breakdown to 19% a little bit more. Including the Burlington transaction E&P was about 16% ROCE. This was all on purchase accounting. Refining marketing was 32%, midstream chemicals was 26, LUKOIL was 22% and the blended is 19%. At the First Call pricing for the last half of 2006, along with the second quarter actual results, the Burlington Resources dilution is approximately 6%. Now that's higher than we indicated in the first quarter due to the lower natural gas prices in the second quarter. The dilution is higher by about 1% from what we thought when we went forward with the transaction. If you use current First Call pricing weighted on Burlington Resources' balance between oil and gas, remember about 30% of Burlington Resources are oil and 70% is about gas. The MCF equivalent has not materially changed from when we announced the acquisition in December 2005. These numbers are not available, but let me go through it because I think it's important to understand. The First Call pricing for oil when we did the transaction announcement December 9, 2005 for all of 2006 was a price of $57.50. The current First Call oil price for what we've experienced this part of the year and for the remainder of this year is $65.68. Now if we go to the First Call gas price back on December 9, 2005, the First Call gas price was $8.52 an MCF. Currently, if you look at what's happened in the first two quarters of this year and the First Call for the third and fourth quarters, that First Call then is $7.49 an MCF. I’ll make a point here, back at December 9, 2005 the First Call Gulf Coast crack spread assumption was $8.50 a barrel. Currently for all of this year of '06 the First Call Gulf Coast crack spread is $11.71 a barrel. Now if you convert the oil production of Burlington Resources back to an MCF equivalent and at December 9, 2005 the view was the First Call an MCF equivalent to Burlington Resources' production was $8.85 an MCF. If you take what's taken place the first six months of this year and First Call's view of oil and gas for the third and fourth quarters, then the equivalent for all of '06 is $8.56 an MCF. What we're trying to say is that when we did the transaction and announced the transaction back in December we said we assumed that the MCF equivalent would be for '06 was $8.50 for '06 for Burlington production and $7.50 for '07 and $7 in '08. Well, what you can see is on an MCF equivalent it's pretty much what we thought for different reasons in '06. Obviously gas price is lower, oil price is higher. The reason we get the 6% analyzed dilution on earnings is because the gas production has more profitability than the oil production at Burlington Resources. But more importantly, you can see we get the dilution impact by more shares outstanding because the downstream is quite a bit stronger. So what we're trying to say is the dilution on income is about 1% higher than we thought when we announced the transaction. Now with respect to the accretion on cash for the year using these assumptions and actual for the first six months of the year, we see the cash accretion for this transaction about 2%. That's about 1% lower than we thought for '06. Now the net income breakeven for the Burlington production on an equivalent basis, as we shared with you in prior conference calls is about $4 an MCF. So that's why we wanted to provide you our assessment and views of the Burlington transaction after the end of the first quarter and how we see it going forward for the remainder of the year. Now I'm going to go to slide number 16 which is our outlook. Obviously we're continuing the integration of Burlington Resources operations into ConocoPhillips' global portfolio. We're pleased with the progress to-date. Another point, in July the United Kingdom enacted higher income taxes retroactive to the beginning of the year. In addition to the ongoing impact of this rate change, we anticipate a one-time third-quarter charge of about $400 million which includes approximately $125 million related to the Company's operations for the first six months of '06. So we want you to factor that into your assessments and projections going forward for the third and fourth quarter. Our recently announced asset rationalization program is progressing. We expect to finalize a listing of the assets to be sold and then begin active marketing of them in the third quarter. As we said, this program would be done over the third and fourth quarters of this year and then over into 2007. Now although we expect this repositioning of the assets to result in an overall gain over this 18-month time period, it's reasonably likely we will record an impairment in our third quarter '06 financial statements as we change the financial reporting status of these assets from continuing operations to assets held for sale. Like we always do and continue to do as a Company, we pursue a number of additional business development opportunities, a few of which I'd like to just mention before I close and we go to your questions. We recently signed an agreement with Saudi Aramco to do a very detailed evaluation and then as we plan going forward with the development of a 400,000 barrel a day full conversion refinery at Yanbu, Saudi Arabia. In addition, we recently signed an agreement with an international petroleum investment company known as IPIC in Abu Dhabi to study the development of a 500,000 barrel a day refinery at Fujairah, United Arab Emirates. Both of these benches fit very well with our basic overall strategy to invest in projects that expand our global refining presence supported by our commercial activities and help and support what we do in the upstream as well. This helps us grow our portfolios around the world. A second agreement was also signed with IPIC which allows us to work together in identifying not only downstream, but also some upstream opportunities that we can be working together. So this really concludes what opening comments that I had. And so I think we're now ready, Gary, to move to questions.
Jen, I think we're ready for some questions.
(Operator Instructions) Your first question comes from Arjun Murti - Goldman Sachs. Arjun Murti - Goldman Sachs: Thank you. Jim, my question was on how we might think about the long-term return potential from the potentially two new refineries in Saudi Arabia and UAE? I guess I clearly appreciate high margins; they are signaling the need for new refining investments. The question is in all of our modeling, you spend a lot of capital for a number of years and then you need high margins to last for many, many years into the future. It seems like in looking back at the very long-term history of this business when people have built the new refineries and then ultimately there's some period of lower margins, what might it be about these refineries that reduces the risk at some point out in the future that is so far out we can't forecast today, but that you won't sort of get stuck with investments that were built in a high-price environment, and then the returns don't look so good in a low-priced environment?
Thanks. Good question. When we develop these projects we obviously don't assume the crack spreads that we see today. We assume crack spreads that are more closer to historic margins but somewhat higher. Furthermore, the commercial arrangements that we have in place will certainly adjust the margins. In other words, we look at the cost of feedstock such that we see both in good and not so good times in terms of margins that we realize an expected rate of return over the cycle of higher margins and lower margins. So we build in commercial arrangements with our partners to do this. Furthermore, I think another thing is we will not have full ownership. We'll have partial ownership in these refineries and we also expect to use some degree of financial leverage in a way that does not come back in terms of recourse to the Company. So a few points: First, it's going to be more on historic margins, not looking at just the margins we see today. Commercially they were structured in a way that realizes acceptable returns in good and not so good times. Then we will also use some leverage, but when we look at our returns it's on an unlevered basis before in making our decision to go forward. Arjun Murti - Goldman Sachs: That's very helpful. If I can just follow-up there. I appreciate the term commercial arrangements with partners is probably sensitive and you may not care to elaborate. When I think of the E&P business, you have these production sharing contracts which often affectively allow some sort of minimum return with some sort of maximum return. Is that effectively what one might think of here for a new build refinery internationally versus here in the U.S. where you're just going to have the margin exposure relative to the capital that's spent?
I think what we're certainly look at that and I really shouldn't be getting into it too far, because it's not that well-developed on commercial arrangements we obviously are looking at acceptable returns in a low margin environment. But we certainly don't expect to be seeing caps on the upper side. Arjun Murti - Goldman Sachs: That is very helpful. I'll stop there. Thank you very much.
Our next question comes from Jennifer Rowland – JP Morgan. Jennifer Rowland - JP Morgan: Another question actually on refining. Do you have any preliminary cost estimates or startup for the refinery in the UAE? Secondly, what is your appetite for additional refinery deals? The reason why I say that is you seem to have a lot on your plate with the Saudi and now the UAE refinery, also the big upgrade project at the Wilhelmshaven refinery; and then of course what you're doing in the U.S. So it seems like you have a lot going on. I just wonder if you can comment as far as the appetite for doing anything else on the refining side?
Thank you. You make a good point. We have a lot that we're doing not only in the clean fuels but increasing our capability to handling heavy oil in the United States whether it comes from Canada or it's imported from other sources. So we've got a lot on our plate in the United States. As you say, we have the deep conversion project at Wilhelmshaven, we're looking at a grassroots refinery that we're very interested and excited about in the Middle East. So we have a lot on our plate. We look at things that might be available for acquisition. But frankly, just by the decisions and what we've announced, you can see where our direction is headed more to increasing our capability in what we have and adding to new grassroots refineries in the Middle East, deep conversion at Wilhelmshaven. I think we're also interested in something that could help us augment our portfolio potentially in Asia, but I think your question is spot on. I think it's somewhat unlikely that we would be looking; we'll look always, but given the cost it's unlikely we'll be making refinery acquisitions. Jennifer Rowland - JP Morgan: On the UAE refinery, anything you can provide as far as preliminary costs or start-up dates?
No. We're very early in the feasibility side of Abu Dhabi which is actually coming behind where we are in the study and the technical work that's been done on the Yanbu refinery with Saudi Aramco. We're quite a bit further along on the project with Saudi Aramco. Jennifer Rowland - JP Morgan: What's the status of the Wood River refinery after the damage it incurred last week or the week before? Is that almost back to normal operations or is it going to be off-line for a while further?
In terms of startup, we expect by this time sometime next week it will be back to full capacity, full operation. Jennifer Rowland - JP Morgan: Okay, great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch. John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch: Some unrelated ones. You had a lot of turnaround expenses and time in the U.S. Given the extensive nature of the turnarounds, going forward will the turnarounds be shorter and less expensive?
Well, a generic response, not necessarily unique to each refinery, but a generic response. We've had a lot of turnarounds, not only because we have turnarounds, but also we had to introduce new equipment and changes to meet clean fuels requirements. So that led to more costly and longer time periods for turnaround to meet these new requirements. Hopefully obviously one of the things that is moving towards operating excellence is we'd like to extend the duration and shorten the time period and when we do turnaround shorten the time period of cost, but extend the duration from one period of time for a refinery or unit when we do a major turnaround. So I think we've been pretty good in terms of telling you ahead of time what our turnaround expenses are for the remainder of the year. Maybe if John Carrig has that, he can update you on the third and fourth quarter.
We indicated on the first quarter call that we expected full-year turnaround estimates for 2006 to be $385 million to $390 million, around that neighborhood and we still expect that. Of course the bulk of these costs, about $285 million have been incurred in the first half of the year. So we have a much lighter planned turnaround schedule for the third and fourth quarter. John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch: Great. Upstream regarding the asset sales, can you give us a ballpark on potential volume exposure?
We really don't have that available. I don't have that immediately available. I think the other important point we would want to say is we're looking at selling, in total, several billion dollars of assets upstream and downstream. If we don't get the right price it won't be sold. So I think we can give you a much matter update on that on the third quarter conference call in about three months. John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch: Regarding the corporate Burlington transaction cost, was that pretty much retention and is that the end of those kinds of transition costs?
Those were costs related to retention as well as some exploration-type costs that were in the nature of one-time costs. We have some transition costs that we indicated that we would expect to have, but to get back to the run rate of the 360 we wouldn't expect these one-time costs to continue. John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch: Last one for me is on North American natural gas. Mr. Mulva mentioned that prices were weaker in the second quarter, they've been getting stronger. You've got a bigger marketing presence now in North America. So what are you seeing on the demand-side?
I guess from our point of view our production is not impacted necessarily by demand. We are finding a lot of competition in terms of having certainly always the workforce to do all the work that we plan to do; and weather impacts that as well. But I don't think we're finding it an issue with respect to the ability to sell the gas, since the issue is with the price.
Right, and the storage overhang. So there's no new issues out there that we see and the demand is dominated by weather. John Herrlin - Merrill Lynch: I was just wondering if maybe you were seeing some industrial load increase, that's all. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns. Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns: Good morning. I was wondering if you could help me with your 2006 CapEx guidance? I think you made mention in the press release of a spending level of about $18 billion. I had you down for $17 billion post Burlington Resources. So does that reflect an increase in your CapEx guidance?
No, we still are saying CapEx plus getting to 20% ownership in LUKOIL we're going to spend $18 billion, and we haven't changed that at all. You can look at the first six months of the year and you could argue, well, maybe we won't spend all $18 billion, but we've got a lot of ramp up on projects. So at this point in time, we could say in the third quarter as we go to the latter part of the year we'll certainly update on the numbers, but it's still $18 billion. Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns: Some of your competitors have mentioned inflationary pressures. It sounds like you have some wiggle room in your budget for inflation.
I thought your question was going to be are we experiencing some pretty severe and strong inflation and cost pressure. Yes, we are seeing it in just about every part of our business. So I don't think there's any wiggle room in that regard. The onus and the difficulty is how do we manage our cost structure? We're no different than the other companies in the industry. We are experiencing and it's a difficult subject; how do we manage the escalation in cost pressures? It's not only operating expenses, it's also certainly in our capital spending programs. Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns: Just on another topic; I think you ended the first quarter with an under lip position in Libya and you had expected that to be reversed, at least in part, in the second quarter. Could you just talk about the status of that?
I think a lot of it has been reversed in the second quarter, we may have a little bit more to go, but we're certainly not in the same position we were at the end of the first quarter. Gary, do you have anything more on that?
Yes. I would tell you we're still probably on track to complete the recapturing of that under lip through the end of this year. We did capture some in the second quarter, you can see some in the numbers. The production number for Libya was 74. You would have expected it to be somewhere around 45, so you can see the effect of that capture. But there's more to come and it probably will take us through the end of the year to get that. Nikki Decker - Bear Stearns: Thank you.
Our next question comes from Michael Young - Fidelity Investments. Michael Young - Fidelity Investments: Jim, good morning. Great quarter. I wanted to ask, can you give us an update on your latest contacts with the Venezuelan and Mr. Chavez in particular? I believe that you were planning to meet with him sometime in the May/June time period. I was just wondering if that meeting ever did take place.
I have not met. Our people have been to Caracas; several of our meetings have been postponed and so we look forward to those coming here over the next month or two. But our people in exploration and production have been meeting and working with the ministry people in [Pedivasa] and so that has been ongoing. But in terms of anything new to say with respect to its impact and some of the things we read about it in the media regarding royalty, taxation, impact on operations and Petrozuata and Hamaca, there's really nothing new to report. Michael Young - Fidelity Investments: Okay.
Our next question comes from Doug Terreson - Morgan Stanley. Doug Terreson - Morgan Stanley: Good morning, guys, and congratulations on your record results. In exploration, specifically in Alaska, you guys have a fairly dominant position and it seems like you may have had another success up there. On this point I wanted to see if there were any elaborations you could provide at this time on the magnitude of the recent discovery near Alpine. Also a little bit of an update on the next steps for that program both in terms of exploration and development activity over the next year or so?
Doug, thanks for your comments about the performance of the Company. Actually I don't have anything more to add with respect to what we've been doing up in Alaska. I think if I just step back on our total exploration program, everything that we've done in the old ConocoPhillips we continue to do as our program in terms of our spend. Now obviously we have more with respect to the Burlington transaction that we will be doing until the program has expanded. But in terms of announcing or saying something about the success of the program or what we're doing in Alaska and other places, unless it's already disclosed I don't think I really have anything more to say. Doug Terreson - Morgan Stanley: Okay. Let me just ask you one more question about the proposed new plants in the Middle East. As you mentioned a few minutes ago, Jim, the Saudi project is more advanced than the one in the Emirates by a year or so. Could you elaborate on what you guys might have learned over the past year or so regarding the changing capital requirement to construct new refineries in the world today? You talked about some of the obvious competitive advantages that those plants will have, but there has been kind of a wide range of capital investment requirements that have been tossed around. So could you talk about how that expectation may have changed over the past year or so if you have any updated numbers?
Well, I don't have updated numbers. Obviously our people are working hard on the numbers. What's awfully important is the capital investment. And there's so much that's being done in the Middle East, not only in the downstream but certainly in the upstream in LNG in [Goiter] and other places that what we are seeing is anything you do, not only in the Middle East but around the world, the cost has gone up dramatically. So we have to really be good stewards of capital and watch this very carefully and have a good idea of what is the cost going to be for a larger refinery or an LNG train or ships or whatever. It's quite a factor as we look at the Saudi Aramco project at Yanbu and Fujairah with IPIC in the Emirates. So I don't really have anything more to say other than we'll put in a lot of contingency and escalation when we look at what the ultimate capital cost of these projects will be. Doug Terreson - Morgan Stanley: Sure, okay, great. Thanks again and congratulations.
Our next question comes from Neil McMahon - Sanford Bernstein. Neil McMahon - Sanford Bernstein: Good morning. First of all, when you look at your margins per barrel in the upstream in the second quarter versus the first quarter, they were negatively impacted and it seems largely from much higher DD&A per barrel cost. It looks like in the U.S. with the Burlington acquisition your depreciation per barrel went up 43%. I'm just wondering what impact you foresee your future divestments having on depreciation per barrel, to see if you can drag it back down from the $9.50 per barrel number it is today? Then I've got a follow-up question as well.
Well, Neil, the divestment program across the board would be both upstream and downstream assets. They're going to tend to be late life assets. But I wouldn't expect to move the needle in a material way in terms of the total Company's DD&A per barrel. Neil McMahon - Sanford Bernstein: Okay. The second question is, and I know it's a relatively minor amount, it looks like it's $25 million in asset impairments in the second quarter which basically hadn't been there for the whole of 2005. So I'm just wondering if that was associated with the Burlington acquisition. I wonder, as you've spent more time with these assets, now having a full quarter under your belt and with the persistent low natural gas prices, if there's any greater risk of taking more substantial asset impairments or write-offs associated with goodwill as you go through the year, if there's going to be any ceiling test?
Well, two points. First, the $25 million or so that we indicated was a property impairment was related to the SRW, the Sabine River Works cogen facility, a turbine there that failed that we talked about earlier during Jim's remarks on the call. As a successful efforts accounting company, we don't have a ceiling test for our accounting for our oil and gas assets. As we indicated earlier in Jim's remarks, the asset disposition program we do expect gains overall, but in the third quarter as we changed the status of assets from income from continuing operations assets to assets held for sale, you recognize the losses first. We would expect to have some impairments in the third quarter related to the disposition program. But related to the Burlington assets, we will run the test every year as we always do, and we don't foresee plans of any material write-down. Neil McMahon - Sanford Bernstein: Okay, thanks.
Our next question comes from Doug Leggate - Citigroup. Doug Leggate - Citigroup: A couple of things from me. First of all on the asset divestments, I understand you don't want to give any specific details, but obviously the acquisition of Burlington has had you revisit the upstream, but why downstream? Why are you suddenly designing to have a look at your downstream portfolio? Can you maybe just elaborate a little bit on the kind of things you have in mind? Are we talking about major refinery disposals, for example, or is that just a little bit too far afield?
Without getting into the specifics, strategically, we have had a direction whereby we have been maintaining our position in refining and lightening up on marketing assets. With an assets base now that has grown to over $100 billion, and we're talking about a several billion dollar asset disposition program, we regard it as high grading. We're looking across the entire spectrum of our asset base to determine what might be better placed in someone else's hands versus our own. It's not to say there -- no assets are ruled out. But we indicated they'd be more on the upstream side, more late life assets or assets that are not strategically significant to us. On the downstream side, like I indicated, we've historically lightened up on marketing and there could be some refining, but it would be more oriented towards marketing. Doug Leggate - Citigroup: Okay, thanks. I only have one follow up. If we look at the debt pay down during the quarter, obviously you delved into your cash by a little bit there. If we strip the cash and the balance sheet out for a second and look at your capacity to pay down debt from free cash flow even in the kind of current environment. Can you just give us some sense as to how quickly and what kind of pace you would expect to see the absolute level of debt reduce over let's say the next couple of years? What kind of aspirations have you got?
What we've said over the next 18 months, which is the remainder of this year and '07, first of all we will fund our capital program. The capital program looks like it's near $18 billion a year. It could be a little bit less in '07, but for planning purposes say it's $18 billion. Second, we want to bring the absolute level of debt down $1 billion a quarter. Third, we want a competitive dividend and we like the idea of raising the dividend once a year. We build that into our plans. And to the extent after doing those three or four items, then what cash flow remains we'll be buying shares in. That's what we intend to do. So as you bring the debt down $1 billion a quarter, we might bring it down a little bit more in a given quarter, and if so, great. But as we get our debt ratio down toward 20%, absolute level of debt down closer to $20 billion, then we start doing more on share repurchase. Doug Leggate - Citigroup: Okay, that's very clear. Thanks very much, indeed.
Our next question comes from Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank. Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank: Continuing somewhat with the theme here. In the past you've talked about trying to get your capital employed more into the upstream and less into the downstream. And off the top of my head I believe you used to talk about going from 60% upstream/downstream to towards more like 70% to 75%. Are you still working within some kind of parameter like that and could you elaborate if you are? Thanks.
Well, we look at the opportunities and it just happens that the portfolio breaks out to where it is today. But we are trying to do quite a few things in the upstream: the gas pipeline from Alaska, LNG projects, heavy oil projects. But then on the downstream the opportunities that we have increasing our capability to handling heavy oil at refineries domestically in the U.S. and we have Wilhelmshaven, we have leased refineries. So we look at the opportunities and we don't get too hung up whether that balance is 60-40 or 70-30. We look at the opportunities and what we think is best and we don't get too hung up whether it has to be 70% or 63% or 68%, as long as it's probably in this 60-40 to 70-30 that's fine with us. Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank: Right, I'm with you. So it's a question I guess of returns of a given project across the whole suite of opportunity?
That's right. Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank: More specifically, in terms of the two Middle Eastern opportunities, could you envisage a situation then when you were progressing both of them simultaneously?
Sure, absolutely. Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank: That's kind of where I was headed with that one. Finally, separately, hedging. You've been interesting on the subject in the past. Could you say if you feel vindicated? Further to some comments you were making, Jim, during your prepared remarks about hedging and gas in the U.S. and any other items you could add on with the U.S. natural gas market would be interesting, too. Thanks.
We haven't hedged. Obviously our commercial organization, we do a lot of trading because we have physical volumes to move. But we don't take views on oil prices, gas prices or crack spreads and hedge looking forward earnings or cash flow. We'll continue to always look, but when we took a look at the Burlington transaction back last year and the early part of this year a lot of questions came to us from the financial community, why don't you hedge with high gas prices? We looked at it and a few of the things that we found was that the accounting treatment was difficult. We also know it was going to cost us quite a bit of money and then we had basis differential. We'll keep looking at it, obviously if you can look at it and say you're vindicated, no, we haven't been vindicated because gas prices have backed off. You could make an argument that we should have been hedging the production, but over the long-term our culture and our approach is that we don't hedge our production. We think we have the portfolio we like and we change the nature of the Company when we start doing those things. And we feel that you can't do them on a probability basis over time and get it right. Paul Sankey - Deutsche Bank: Sure. Well, speaking as a dumb analyst I've got to say it's easier to model if you don't. Thanks.
Our next question comes from Dan Barcelo - Banc of America Securities. Dan Barcelo - Banc of America Securities: Just a few questions if I could continue on Burlington. The first part was really similar to an earlier question on DD&A rates. It seems the second quarter level obviously is up with the step up in the evaluation of those assets. But I just was curious, it seems that that second quarter level is higher than what was initially discussed in terms of the step up and also higher than what was in the S-4. I just wanted to know if that thinking was correct and what could be behind that. I understand it's a non-cash item, but just trying to get my arms around that DD&A level going forward. And then just also, from a very high level, if you could maybe just highlight what you've seen now in these BR assets basically looking at them from a good part of this year. Any more exploration upside you've examined? How is it going with employees and retention? Is there any scope yet for a synergy capture uplift?
Well, John will answer the DD&A question. First of all, in terms of production, Burlington came up before it was acquired by ConocoPhillips with a forecast of production for the year and we continue to stay right with that. We're realizing the volumes that we thought. So that still is right on target. In terms of what we do see and experience though is the cost. The cost of everything we are going, whether it's in Burlington or everything in our Company other than Burlington, costs are going up. The other point you've raised is in terms of people. It's not only the people that have come to ConocoPhillips from Burlington, but we, our Company and all the companies in the industry, there's quite a competitive environment for people. And so we have to make sure we're competitive. It's not just with the Burlington, it's with everyone that works in the E&P upstream part of our company in the industry. Synergies, we continue to work hard on synergies and we still stand behind the synergies that we said that we were going to capture when we announced the transaction. Now in terms of whether we're seeing something different in terms of DD&A from what we expected, John can comment on that.
Dan, on the first quarter earnings call we indicated we expected about 7.1 of DD&A for the full year. And if you take the 11.80 in the first quarter and the 19.65 in the second quarter, as you increase volume it can go up modestly. But we don't expect it to go up materially and we would expect to be right in line with that 7.1 on a full-year basis for 2006. Dan Barcelo - Banc of America Securities: Great, thanks very much.
Our next question comes from Gene Gillespie - Howard Weil. Gene Gillespie - Howard Weil: Good morning. A large Canadian company indicated in the last day or two that they might be interested in swapping some heavy oil production for refining capacity. I guess without being specific, on a global basis, Jim, would you have an appetite to be on the other side of that and perhaps swap some refining capacity for resource?
Good point that you're making. It's something that we have said I think in not only conference calls, but in our annual presentations to the financial community. First of all, we've been making investments in our refineries so as to handle the heavy poor quality crude because we think it's good for the downstream business and so that's why we embarked upon a multibillion dollar program over about five or six years. In terms of using that refining capacity, we have some choices. We just buy heavy crude from Canada or import it from other places, Venezuela or other countries. We can do that or we can also take a look at and say, well, we don't have as large a position in heavy oils as we might like. We have our Surmont project which is going to start production late this year or early next year, but we'd like to be more in heavy oils in Canada. So it's a good question. It's something that we study and at this point in time we really haven't come to conclusions or are about to say anything, but it's something that we naturally should study. It may make a lot of sense for us to do. Gene Gillespie - Howard Weil: Thank you.
Our next question comes from Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co. Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co.: I had a couple things. I want to try the DD&A question of a moment ago from a slightly different angle. John, have there been any explicit adjustments to the purchase accounting treatment that was specified in the most recent S-4?
I'm sure there have been some tweaks to it, Mark, but I don't recall any significant changes. We have the S-4, we have what was in the first quarter Q. I would say that, as we indicated, we thought it was 7.1 before and we still expect it to be 7.1. So I don't see a material change. But if there is we'll have to come back to you. Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co.: Okay. It appears to me – and I'm looking for either confirmation or elaboration -- that the LNG volumes and earnings are both low. Could you address that?
Well, my understanding, and then the others can come in -- we actually started production sooner than we thought. We had some normal startup difficulties in terms of lining out everything and making the volumes, not from production, but just getting the thing planned out. But we're back on in terms of our production, just what we expected for our internal plans. I don't know what we've been saying outside to the financial community, but we watch these things very carefully and in terms of our production we're essentially right on or a little bit ahead of plan.
Right, but we're still in the ramp-up phase. So we're not at full run rates and we think it's a good project and it will continue to be a good project. So not sure what data you're utilizing to reach that conclusion, but we like the project. Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co.: When would you expect to be at full capacity on it, John?
I would say that's a normal ramp up, Mark.
Why don't we just come back to you on that? Because if I say a date I'm probably going to be off by several months. Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co.: Just one final one for me. It looks to me as if you've made some significant changes or adjustments in terms of the inputs at Wilhelmshaven, in running intermediates or blend stocks as opposed to crude. Is that the case and, if so, what's the thinking on that?
It's fundamentally a hydra-skimming facility. Again, there's no change in the feedstock slate that's jumped out at us, but we will certainly come back to you and indicate whether that's the case for sure. Mark Gilman - Benchmark Co.: Okay, guys. Thanks a lot.
Our next question comes from Gene Pisasale - Mercantile Trust. Gene Pisasale - Mercantile Trust: First, great quarter, congratulations. Just a comment on the barrels produced around the world. The major oils really looking at a higher risk profile for their production today than they were five or ten years ago. With recent moves in Venezuela and Russia, specifically Russia most recently in terms of moving forward with various projects and trying to keep out certain players, so to speak; are you concerned about having a much higher risk premium to your barrels today than you did let's say five years ago? If so, are you just accepting that risk and just trying to spread it around the world?
Thanks, good question. The first point that I would make, though, is compared to most companies of our size, larger or smaller, of course we're in a much higher position of OECD reserves and production. In other words, we start with a very strong base. I can't give you the exact number, but I'll say 65% to 70% of our reserves and production come from North America, the North Sea, you could say [key] North Sea, Australia. So we start with that position and then as we branch out and go to other places where the new opportunities are. So in that regard I think we are competitively rather unique. We have such a high percentage of exposure, position and assets in production in OECD nations. In terms of Russia, our experience in Russia has been very good. In other words, we work together very closely with LUKOIL, and in working with LUKOIL, our ownership in LUKOIL, we don't see any adverse impact of them operating in Russia or outside Russia. Then our joint venture project in the Nanuq area in the North where we have developed the YK Field and we have 30% of it, LUKOIL 70%, we don't see any adverse impact, political risk on that. The other is we're one of five companies short-listed for the Shtokman project working with Gazprom. No decision has been made on that, but we feel we've given a good competitive proposal and hopefully in the next several weeks or months we'll hear the decision of who the participants will be. But from a point of view of concern about Russia, there's political risk wherever you go in the world. Political risk can be all kinds of risk from the standpoint of it can be fiscal takes, changes in fiscal takes, it can be changes in operations, whatever. But we start off with a strong base. You can see from where we invest, Russia, Caspian and Kashagan, downstream and upstream. Upstream we're LNG in [Goiter], downstream Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi. We certainly wouldn't be making these investments if we didn't think the political risks were acceptable. Gene Pisasale - Mercantile Trust: Thanks very much.
Our next question comes from Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey. Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey: Great quarter. In under the gun here. Just a couple quick ones. What was the opportunity loss in the upstream and downstream that you referenced from the unplanned downtime?
First, opportunity loss. Upstream is we find that some of our production up in Prudhoe Bay that you're aware of has impacted up maybe 20,000 barrels a day. We've had some downtime in the North Sea operationally that cost us several thousand barrels a day. We've had some unplanned downtime in certain of our refineries like Charles and Humber we noted in our media release. When you look at these prices and crack spreads it has quite an impact. It can amount to a pretty significant impact to both upstream and downstream. That's what we're referring to. Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey: I was just curious if you put a dollar amount on it.
Well, we do. We do it for internal purposes, but we don't put that out externally. We do it for accountability within the Company, but you can look at the numbers when you're down by ‘X’ number of days and you look at the crack spreads and the oil price, after tax you'd probably come up with a number or get pretty close anyway. Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey: Fair enough. One last one. With the Burlington acquisition, have you noticed a change to your upstream realizations on gas and oil versus the benchmarks?
We're pretty well in line. If you look at the quarter-over-quarter decline at Henry Hub, the realizations that we've experienced in the lower 48 are pretty consistent. Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey: Is that the way you think it will play out in the coming quarters?
Yes, that's our expectation. Jacques Rousseau - Friedman Billings Ramsey: Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, that is all the time we have for Q&A today. I'll now hand the presentation back to management for closing remarks.
Well again, we really appreciate you joining us today for our second quarter conference call and walk-through earnings. We remind you that the presentation along with the transcript of this webcast will be available on our Web page, www.ConocoPhillips.com. Again, thank you for joining us.
Ladies and gentlemen, we thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the presentation and you may now disconnect.