Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (PBR -1.15%)
Q4 2019 Earnings Call
Feb 20, 2020, 9:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Petrobras webcast and conference call with analysts and investors concerning its fourth quarter 2019 results. We would like to inform you that participants will follow the transmission by Internet and telephone only as listeners. [Operator Instructions] Present with us today are Mr. Roberto Castello Branco, Petrobras' CEO; Mrs. Andrea Almeida, Chief Financial and Investor Relations Officer; Mr. Carlos Alberto Pereira De Oliveira, Chief Exploration and Production Officer; Mrs. Anelise Quintao Lara, Chief Refining and Natural Gas Officer; Mr. Rudimar Andreis Lorenzatto, Chief Production Development Officer; Mr. Eberaldo de Almeida, Chief Corporate Affairs Officer; Mr. Nicolas Simone, Chief Digital Transformation and Innovation Officer; Mr. Roberto Furian Ardenghy, Chief Institutional Relations Officer; Mr. Marcelo Zenkner, Chief Governance and Compliance Officer; as well as other company executives. We'll start by listening to Petrobras' CEO, Mr. Roberto Castello Branco, with the main highlights of the results. The presentation will remain available throughout the webcast and on the company's Investor Relations website.

Please, Mr. Roberto, go ahead.

Roberto Castello Branco -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. It's very pleasant to have the opportunity to exchange ideas with you. Our top line performance was very good. The numbers are very clear. But we are in the oil business. Oil is a business with a long-term horizon, and so the strategy and the execution of the strategy is are key. And our strategy as you know very well, it's a very simple one, this is on five pillars. Five because it's simple to always remind the stresses goes a second. What is the situation? The Thousand 19 we delivered. What we promise in terms of strategies is inclusion We went ahead with portfolio management, divesting 16.3 billion US dollars of no core assets assets in which we are not the natural owners. On the other hand, we invested $27.4 billion in assets, and particularly, we invested in the acquisition of rights to explore and produce oil in ultra deep waters. We, especially Moses, Moses is the largest of four, or I feel discovered in the world. He's a real world class asset, with significance reserved reserves. Low cost, low lifting costs, low risk as federal Bryce is the best is the best player in terms of understanding knowing losers, better prize was awarded by the offshore Technology Conference, do these projects to explore boozes. So it's an example how deep is our knowledge about this giant oilfield.

Also, it's an example how the portfolio can be managed very efficiently with the goal of creating value to shareholders. And at the same time, jointly with a strong cash flow generation, we're able to reduce debt. We paid about USD24 billion in debt, reducing the and this reduction combined with a very efficient corporate liability management. Petrobras was awarded as by the LatinFinance with the best Corporate Liability Management Program. We economized $1.2 billion in interest. Petrobras had a very heavy interest burden in the past. There were years where Petrobras paid about $7 billion in interest to its creditors, which is more than is needed to invest in a production system, which is about USD5.5 billion. And this is very important for the future of the company. At the same time, we put in place a more disciplined capital allocation, very rigorous criteria to approve projects. Our main concept, projects have to compete for capital. Capital is gas. Funds will be allocated to projects on their own merits, not because we like this project, we dislike that. If they have merits. And one of the most important metrics, they have to be resilient at a price of oil as low as $40 per barrel. So we are with this, we are on the safe side. At the same time, we are implementing several programs dedicated to increase significantly the rate of return on projects. We're able to reduce the ramp-up period of our platforms, FPSOs, to an average of nine months.

We recently, we employed an innovation, the use of a dry dock, to drive our new FPSO, P-70, from China to from the Chinese shipyard to Rio. Instead of taking 100 days, the average in the past, it took only 45 days. And time is key for rates of return on projects. And we are implementing two projects that have the potential to revolutionize the oil industry. One is dedicated to increase significantly the probability of finding oil in an exploration to reduce practically to 0 the probability of drilling a well and finding no oil. And the other one is a project to shorten the period between the start of the exploratory phase to the first oil. For the pre-salt, we had an average of 3,000 days. Our goal is to reduce to 1,000 days. This is being executed. First results are very good. We are very enthusiastic about the future of both projects that will place our the rate of return of the rates of return of our projects on another plateau. And we are using we are starting to use digital transformation to help us with these projects, even with the activities in the corporate center, using more data analytics, augmented reality, artificial intelligence. We have created a new division that's in charge with working very intensively in producing results in the short term. We are strengthening our high-performance computing capacity. By the end of this year, it could be 10 times the capacity should be 10 times the one we had at the end of 2018. There are several initiatives that are being executed.

Last year, we announced the start of implementation of EVA. We concluded it. And this year, we are going to execute it to be not only a metric to for compensation for variable compensation, but it's very important to identify inefficiencies in the various segments of the company to in order to be able to correct them, to eliminate these inefficiencies and to empower people, to fuel people, to make people to feel like entrepreneurs taking managing a small business and trying to be successful in their achievements because they know that they will be compensated by the efforts. So this is the scenario in terms of environmental, social, and governance. I'd like to tell you that we have a strong focus in environment. We have a strong commitment. We the decarbonisation of our corporations, Petra Bryce is second only to Ecuador in terms of India. Issues per barrel of oil and do continue relentless to pursue the reduction of emissions of greenhouse gases. We are advancing in terms of carbon capture Petrobras is a member of the oil and gas Climate Initiative. A nonprofit institution of the oil and gas industry dedicated to sustainability in the world. And in terms in social terms, we are focusing our activities in the social area in the two please who Education with various programs dedicated to children between zero to six years of age, because these are programs with a very high social rate of return is a contribution to better brys to reduce poverty in Brazil. Brazil has still have many people poor, still have serious problems in terms of education.

And education, as you know, is a very powerful weapon to fight poverty and to promote economic development. And we are very happy to know that in terms our improvement in terms of human rights. The Corporate Human Rights Benchmark that's published annually promoted a significant increase, significant improvement in the position of Petrobras. We had an index of 17.6% in 2018. Now we were classified in 2019, last year, with 46.6%, much above the average for the extractive industry, mining and oil, which is around 29%. So these are very good results. In terms of diversity, Petrobras I saw Goldman Sachs saying that it's not going to work in IPOs with companies with no women in the Board. We have 3. We have two executive directors, two excellent executive directors. The number of executive managers, women executive managers, doubled from five at the beginning of 2019. Now we have 10. So we are not focusing only on value on generating value to shareholders. We have also social concerns. And last, but not least, in terms of safety, Petrobras set another benchmark for the global oil industry. The rate of reported accidents, the TAR, has decreased to 0.76. This is a new benchmark for the industry, and we'll continue to pursue better results.

But having said that, I'll pass to my colleague, CFO, Andrea Almeida, for her comments on the financial performance of the company.

Andrea Marques de Almeida -- Company's Chief Financial and Investor Relations Officer

Thanks, Roberto. I'm very happy to be here to share with you some results. And I think Roberto already mentioned the most important ones from the year, but I will go into more maybe some into more detail. So regarding the operating cash flow, we were able in 2019 to reach $25.6 billion and free cash flow of $18.4 billion. Our EBITDA and net income had a solid performance of $32.7 billion and $10.2 billion, respectively, and we also managed to pay $2.5 billion to our shareholders. Our fourth quarter results were positively impacted by external factors, such as Brent and exchange rates. Brent price increased by 2%, and real depreciated by 4%. One of the greatest achievements of 2019 was a $24.5 billion reduction of our debt that reaches 87.1 billion lols important to highlight that this amount includes $24 billion of the text that we got from IFRS 16 implementation. Our leverage measured by net that too bizarre reaches two point 46 times considering the IFRS 16. We know we moved already, but if we still have a big challenge to reach the 2.5 net that that is the goal for 2020. Despite the 9.5% drop in Grand prizes are recurring a Jeopardy desire increased 1% we $34.1 billion in 19, due to lower production costs lower contingencies ending tax of IFRS 16 adoption. In a quarterly basis or recurring Jeopardy desire increased by 2%, reaching $9 billion on the fourth quarter due to lower production costs, the price appreciation of our oil streams in brand prices. The highlight of the EBITDA by business segment is the growth of the E&P and Refining segments. In the Upstream, we had an increase of 9%, reaching $8.8 billion, mainly due to higher production and the recovery in Brent prices.

In the Downstream segment, we had a strong increase of 68%, with EBITDA reaching $1.6 billion in the fourth quarter. The drawdown of low-cost inventories offset the lower margins of diesel, LPG and gas. The gas and energy segment was impacted by the increase of operating expenses despite better margins in natural gas. The strong cash generation and divestments in the fourth quarter enabled us to acquire some blocks in the E&P auctions, especially the transfer rights of surplus. We invested around $18.5 billion in the quarter and managed to prepay $5.9 billion in debt, including $5 billion from the China Development Bank. As a result of our efficient liability management, in 2019, we reduced the cost of our debt to 5.9% per year, below 6%, and managed to increase the debt maturity to 10.8 years. In addition, given the availability of $9 billion in revolving credit lines, our cash management and working capital optimizations, we established a new target for our minimum cash holdings of $5.5 billion. We have been extremely active in our liability management activities, and I would like to highlight some important financial transactions that were concluded in 2019. The prepayment of $24.9 billion, including buyback of bonds in banking market, and the biggest one was China Development Bank. Exchange of bonds amounting to $3.7 billion with the original maturity between 2023 and 2029 for a new one, a more liquid bond that has a maturity in 2030 with a yield of 5.093%, the lowest since 2013. We did export receivable sales of Eletrobras receivables of $2.1 billion, and this was related to a debt that was going to mature in 2025. We issued debentures in the local market of $1.7 billion that continue to help us on the liability.

And last, but not least, we were we received from LatinFinance an award for the best Corporate Liability Management Program in 2019 in recognition of two global bond offers in March and the bond repurchase and offering in September 2019. Our initiatives have contributed to improve our risk perception by the market. From the beginning of 2017 until now, there was a compression in our credit spreads by 283 basis points. This is related to the 10-year bond. From April 2019 shifting from debt to equity. From April 2019 to February 2020, we concluded three important follow-on offers, reaching almost $10 billion. The first was the sale of BR Distribuidora shares, reducing our stake to 37.5%. It was the first privatization of a state owned companies done through the capital markets. In addition, we had passion being there Secretary offered that show the markets confidence in implementation of our transformation agenda. After these transactions, our free float increased from 36% to 49.5%, and the number of shareholders increase significantly in Petrograd reaching 480,000. Investors. We have been working hard in order to reduce the company's contingency. We had important achievements in 2019 will continue continuously decreasing by $11 billion is reduction already includes the monetary effects of 4.2 billion in the period showing that our results were even more outstanding. Now I would like to update you about changing in our pension fund issues. That proves that is our pension funds have been both increasing the Simple 2019 was the death of 1030 billion realized. During 2019. We implemented important changes in order to improve management and governance.

We want to approve a much more effective equalization plan that will reduce the impact on employees proposing a new long-term defined contribution plan that is called internally PP3. In the investments line, we continue to focus on developing the pre-salt. We invested $10.7 billion in 2019 and effectively respecting the target that we set for the year. And if we add the signing bonus, our total investment reached $27.4 billion. Our net income reached $10.2 billion in 2019, an increase of 42%, mainly due to the capital gains on the divestments of TAG and BR. If we consider recurring net income, the result was slightly below last year, mainly reflecting the brand depreciation, which impacted oil margins in 2019. The quarterly results were impacted by impairment, usually concentrated in the fourth quarter, mainly due to the revision of the assumptions of the new strategic plan. The recurring net income increased by 25% compared to the third quarter. This growth was mainly due to higher oil margins as a result of higher price, lower costs and lower financial expenses. We are paying $2.5 billion to our shareholders. In 2020, we have the expectation to pay around EUR three billion, as already mentioned on the Petrobras Day. In the future, if we have if we reach the total debt of $60 billion, we expect to increase the payment of dividends to our shareholders.

And at this point in time, we will be able to distribute 60% of the difference between operating cash flow and investments. We have not yet reached the dividend yield of our peers. However, our total shareholder return outpaced our competitors, reaching 33% for the preferred ADRs and 25% for the common ADRs. I would like to highlight the TAG's divestment, which was as well awarded as the best cross-border M&A transaction by LatinFinance. And I could not refrain from emphasizing the importance of our portfolio management process. In 2019, we were able to get $16.3 billion of total divestments with $14.7 billion of cash inflows. In the fourth quarter of 2019, we had some important developments. We signed two operations, and we concluded an additional four transactions.

Now we leave the floor to questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Frank McGann, Bank of America.

Frank McGann -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Hello, thank you very much. I was wondering if two things. One, on refining and the sales process that's ongoing now. If you could perhaps update us on what the latest is in terms of timing for the different phases of that process. And secondly, in terms of E&P and production levels for 2020, when do you expect that we'll really begin to see the effects of maintenance? Do you have any guidance you could provide in terms of which months are likely to see the most important levels of maintenance and what potential effects you would we could see in those months?

Anelise Lara -- Chief Refining and Gas Natural Officer

Regarding our divestment in the refining process, we are in the binding phase. It means that now, the potential buyers, they are evaluating the data information that they received about each refinery to make a binding proposal that we expect to receive by the second quarter of this year. We keep our expectation to have the SPA signed by the end of this year and to have the closing by the end of 2021 according to the antitrust authority, the document that we signed with Schahin.

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

Carlos Alberto speaking. About the maintenance effect that we are going to see on the production this year, last month, in January, we didn't see this effect yet. We produced almost the same thing that we have produced December last year, around three million barrels of equivalent per day. But now this month, we have started with the stoppage of some platforms, and we will start to see this effect. The effect will be mostly seen at the first semester of this year when we are going to do the 2/3 of our stoppage the number of the stoppages that we have planned for the year. So mostly, we are going to see the effect during along this first semester. And we also see it beginning at this month, February.

Frank McGann -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Okay. In terms of the number of platforms that are affected, how many are there? And what is the average time that each would come down for maintenance? With obviously, I realize it's different for each one, but the average that the effects might be for each unit that's affected.

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

The platforms, the stoppages, they have arise. On the average, we could think about 15 days as the ready figure for the stoppage. And number of platforms, it's well, we will have 30 stoppages this year and 37 platforms.

Frank McGann -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

Our first question next question comes from Bruno Amorim, Goldman Sachs.

Bruno Amorim -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, everyone. I have just a quick follow-up on oil production in Brazil. Your production reached near 2.4 million barrels per day in the fourth quarter of 2019, while you are guiding for 2.2 million in 2020. So I just wanted to understand and try to extend, can this guidance be considered conservative, even in light of the reliability, safety and integrity maintenance activities you intend to perform and asset sales in 2019? As a reference, you overdelivered on your targets provided, indeed, last year by roughly 4%. So is it fair to think this new guidance as a conservative forecast or not?

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

No, we don't think it's conservative. In fact, what we do is that we have made an extensive analysis of risks and looking what we have faced at last year, also the years before. And we decided to include it in our production because now we are very well just at the beginning of the year, but some things can happen along the year. And when we look back to the past and see what happens, so we decided that we should include this the things that generally are disruptive in our analysis of risk of our production. So we have this we have considered this 200,000 barrels per day in our figure for the year 2020, and it has to do with the integrity, safety and reliability of our systems. And in this figure, we if we can split all the factors that contribute to this 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, less on the production, we could split as 40%. That has to do with the what we call the SSCC CO2, the cracking corrosion factor of based on the CO2 on the for the it has to do with the inspection and maintenance of the pipelines. It's around 40%. 40% is has to do with the production stoppage on the pre-salt platforms, and 20% has to do with the production stoppage that we will have on the post-salt platforms. And we also related this 20% to the agreement that we have made with Ibama and where we have to put some injection water plants on the platforms. So it's split on this in this factor. But going back and going straight to your question, we will we still think that we that the production or the target of production that we have set for the year 2020 is correct. We will see what is happening during the year. For sure, we have a very good production at the beginning of the year, although we don't we have already sold the Tartaruga Verde 50% of the Tartaruga Verde and also the assets that we have in Nigeria, but we have to wait. But so far, we think that the figure is very, very good, what we have said.

Bruno Amorim -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

And just a very quick follow-up. So I guess, you do maintenance every year, right? So can you please confirm this 200,000 barrels is on top of what you usually do in terms of maintenance? Or is it the total maintenance impact you expect for the year, including what you would usually do in, let's say, a normal year?

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

No, it's also included. It's all included. In the target for the to the year 2020, we included all the maintenance that we have for the year.

Bruno Amorim -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay. And then how can you give us an idea of how much is the usual impact of maintenance on production? I understand this year, maintenance will impact production to a greater extent than what's the usual number. So usually, how do how does this 200,000 number look like in a regular year, let's say?

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

For the year 2020, it's what I mentioned. 40% of the figure, 200,000 barrels per day, would be is due to the maintenance of the pre-salt platforms, and 20% related to the maintenance of the post-salt platform. So we could consider something like 120,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day for the year 2020. That's the figure related to the maintenance of the platforms.

Operator

The next question comes from Andrew De Luca, Barclays.

Andrew De Luca -- Barclays -- Analyst

Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask on LME. So there was some interesting color you guys provided on the Portuguese call. You mentioned that you're looking to reduce the cost of funding to about 5% from where you are at a little bit under 6% at the end of the quarter. But at the same time, if we look at the last transactions you've done in the market, there's been some reluctance from bondholders to tender bonds just because how comfortable they are with the company's trajectory. So if I'm not mistaken, you mentioned on the Portuguese call you're looking at creative ways to reduce your debt and maybe increase these participation rates for future LME transaction. Is there any color you could provide from the comments that you provided on the Portuguese call and maybe any sense of timing for these transactions?

Andrea Marques de Almeida -- Company's Chief Financial and Investor Relations Officer

So we will have to be creative for the reasons you just mentioned. Our now it's hard. Nobody wants to sell us back the bonds that they have a high return. And definitely, now we will be issuing a lower yield to maturities. That's the reality of Petrobras moving forward. So when I say we will have to be creative is we will have to give investors something different, maybe a more liquid bond and buy back with some cash. We'll have to or maybe to explore a window of time and always giving the bond that is like closer to the maturity that the bondholder has. It's hard to tell you when those things are going to happen because those things are totally related to the windows of opportunities that we have in the capital markets. What I can tell you is, right now, it has been amazing, liquid, the market at the beginning of the year. So there is opportunities right now, but I'm not saying we will do something right now. We're just saying that the beginning of the year has been really positive for people issuing new transactions with very low, I would say, yields compared to the past. We will explore those opportunities, but it's not just about capital markets. It's about renegotiating the debt that we have in the bilaterals, and this is everyday work. So we already did some this year, and we will keep doing that. So the bilaterals that we have flexibility to buy back, we'll be always negotiating them to reduce increased terms and reduce the amount outstanding, reduce the interest on them and increase the maturities on them. It's going to be our work, I would say, in the next two years. Forever, maybe.

Andrew De Luca -- Barclays -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question comes from Muhammed Ghulam, Raymond James.

Muhammed Ghulam -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hey guys, thank you for taking the question this morning. So some so several of the large global integrated oil and gas companies have recently made pretty ambitious announcements regarding the reduction of carbon emissions, some of them even going as far as targeting net 0 emissions. Can you talk about any specific goals you guys might have? And can we expect a similar announcement from you guys in the foreseeable future?

Roberto Castello Branco -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks for your question. If you want, I can announce now that Petrobras will have 0 emissions by 2050. I won't be here and you won't be there. So I can any announcement for 2050. But let's go to the real world. Let's be frank. First, we are not investing in renewables right now because we are very humble guys. We don't have the competence to thrive in this type of business. It is different from oil. In oil, we are the best. But we are not going to lose money just because European companies are doing so and so. We have 10 commitments to sustainability. 0 growth in absolute operating emissions until 2025. I hope I'll be alive still alive in 2025. Perhaps not as CEO of Petrobras, but Petrobras will be here and you continue to be in the financial industry. 0 routine flaring by 2030. And we are committed also to carbon capture. We have a story of carbon capture. Our goal is 40 million tonnes of CO rejection by 2025 and 32% reduction in carbon intensity in the Upstream segment by 2025. So there is a list of 10 commitments. You can find it in our presentation of for the announcement of the strategic plan for in the Petrobras Day 2019. We made this presentation at the NYSE and London as well. But that's we are and last, but not least, I'd like to tell you that Petrobras, in terms of carbon emission by barrel of oil, is second only to Equinor in the global oil and gas industry. That's it. And regarding renewables, we are investing in research and development, trying to acquire the competencies for in the future. If you go for this business, we will go to win, not to lose.

Muhammed Ghulam -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Okay, good. Good answer. Thank you. That's all for me.

Operator

Thank you all. At this time, the Q&A session of Petrobras webcast and conference call is over. Mr. Roberto Castello Branco will now make his final remarks. Please go ahead.

Roberto Castello Branco -- Chief Executive Officer

I'd like to thank you for attending our conference call. It's always a good opportunity to exchange idea, to hear your questions, to have the opportunity to be more transparent. Transparency is one of our goals. It's very it's key to the reduction of cost of capital and we'll be very open to your questions at any time. We you're very welcome to our offices. So we organized this to one of our operations this year. So and my message is that we are strongly committed to make Petrobras a much better company. Our goal is to become the best energy company focused in oil and gas in terms of value creation to shareholders in the world. So thank you for your attendance.

Operator

Thank you. The audio of this conference call for replay will be available on Petrobras Investor Relations website at www.petrobras.com.br/ir. Thank you very much for your participation, and have a great day.

Duration: 44 minutes

Call participants:

Roberto Castello Branco -- Chief Executive Officer

Andrea Marques de Almeida -- Company's Chief Financial and Investor Relations Officer

Anelise Lara -- Chief Refining and Gas Natural Officer

Carlos Alberto Pereira de Oliveira -- Chief Exploration and Production Executive Officer

Frank McGann -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Bruno Amorim -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Andrew De Luca -- Barclays -- Analyst

Muhammed Ghulam -- Raymond James -- Analyst

More PBR analysis

All earnings call transcripts

AlphaStreet Logo