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FOCUS: Exxon CEO struggles to reverse Tillerson's legacy of failed bets

Reuters  |  HOUSTON 

By Ernest Scheyder

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Mobil Corp's $200 million write-down last month on abandoned ventures in - once its next big frontier - points to challenges facing Chief Executive in his second year leading the world's largest publicly traded producer.

Some of the biggest bets taken by his predecessor Rex Tillerson, now the U. S. secretary of state, have resulted in billions of dollars in write-downs amid falling production and a stock price that has long lagged peers.

That leaves Woods facing the prospect of slow growth and billions of dollars in new spending that could weigh on results for years. In 2018, the company plans capital spending of about $24 billion - up about a quarter since 2016 - suggesting return on capital will get worse before it gets better as the firm waits for a payoff from new exploration under Woods.

Rivals including and Chevron, by contrast, have capped or cut their spending after finishing expansion projects. shares are down 18 percent since Woods took over in January 2017. Shell is up 2 percent and is down about 3 percent during the same period.

Woods is feeling the heat from investors who could have made more if they held shares in Exxon's rivals, as well as activist investors who want to see the company take more seriously. Analysts are pushing for more transparency on operations, and some have called for Woods to sell assets.

declined to comment. A State Department said Tillerson would have no comment on matters and referred questions to the company.

is set to host its meeting in on Wednesday.

The firm took the $200 million after-tax charge to walk away from its Kara and ventures with Five years ago, touted plans to spend more than $3 billion in Russia, but the firm halted operations in late 2014 when the U.

S. sanctioned the country over its military operations in

also took $1.3 billion in charges against Tillerson's bets on in and this year. Last year, it took a $2.13 billion write-down a year earlier - mostly on properties tied to Tillerson's 2010 purchase of producer - and disclosed it had reduced estimates of Canadian reserves by 3.5 billion barrels.

"There's no question that, over the past handful of years, has been a relative underperformer," said Hank Smith, of the Haverford Trust, which has held Exxon's shares for two decades and recently added to its portfolio. "It's been frustrating."

'EPIC FAIL'

Weak results from production have this year cost its standing as the major generating the most cash, a distinction that now goes to Shell.

Now, is spending more cash on projects that will take time to produce.

In Guyana, where the company is leading development of an offshore field estimated to hold at least 3.2 billion barrels of oil, and partners have said they must spend more than $4 billion on developing a project not expected to deliver until at least late 2019.

More spending awaits in Qatar, and for liquefied projects, and for developments in Brazil, and Mauritania, the company has said.

paid more than $6 billion last year to double its acreage in the Permian Basin of and New Mexico, the largest Exxon's production there so far is relatively low compared to peers, about 200,000 barrels of equivalent per day. says it plans to triple output there through 2025.

With all Woods' development plans, it seems unlikely Exxon's capital spending will decline after this year, said

The company did reverse some of the write-downs it took on reserves as prices rose. But the company's inability to translate those gains into robust profits in the final quarter of 2017 was an "epic fail," said

LITTLE DATA FOR INVESTORS

Some investors say it's too soon to evaluate Woods' tenure despite Exxon's lagging returns.

"There are few decisions that any one person, let alone Woods, could make in the first 12 to 13 months that would be able to really affect the company," said Mark Stoeckle, of Adams Natural Resources Fund Inc, which holds Exxon's shares.

retains supporters on Wall Street. Its shares are recommended for purchase by 29 percent of the 24 analysts that cover the company, according to data. Half rate the shares as a "hold" and five advise "sell."

Analysts recommending the stock cite the strength of Exxon's assets.

Others, however, want more information on Exxon's operations. Of the world's five largest publicly traded producers, ranks last for providing detailed data to investors, while Plc is the best, according to an analysis of quarterly earnings regulatory filings by Redburn Ltd.

and Shell, for example, offer more than twice as much data as on each segment of operations, Redburn found.

"Mobil's greatest challenge for 2018 might not its valuation, assets or growth, but opening up to investors," said Redburn and gas

(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Gary McWilliams, and Brian Thevenot)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 07 2018. 12:58 IST
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