The question that is on energy investors' mind nowadays is "when will oil and gas companies get back to pre-crash levels?" Well, for this one particular metric, Total (TTE 1.72%) is already back to those pre-crash levels. 

Here's a quick look at the company's results, what it has done to get back to pre-crash levels, and what investors should be looking for in the coming quarters. 

Semi-submersible rig leaving port.

Image source: Getty Images.

Total's results: The raw numbers

Results*Q1 2017Q4 2016Q1 2016
Revenue $41,183 $42,275 $32,841
Net income $2,779 $487 $1,621
EPS $1.14 $0.20 $0.67
Cash flow from operations $4,701 $7,018 $1,881

*IN MILLIONS, EXCEPT PER-SHARE DATA. DATA SOURCE: TOTAL SA EARNINGS RELEASE.

Investors have to be incredibly impressed with the results Total has been able to produce throughout this downturn. Thanks to some lucky timing of investments -- many of its largest projects came online between 2016 and 2017 -- and some drastic cost-cutting measures from management, Total has been able to produce Big Oil's best returns on equity. While Total's peers have yet to report, it seems that, based on these earnings, Total has set a high bar.

The one thing that may look a little off this quarter is the large drop in cash from operations from the prior quarter. This is a result of a $2.2 billion drawdown in working capital in the fourth quarter and a modest working capital build this past quarter. Eventually, these things all come out in the wash, so investors shouldn't worry too much about that. 

What is more notable is that, according to one analyst at Citigroup, Total's free cash flow today is the same as its free cash flow was in 2013 when oil was at $100 a barrel. That, more than anything, is a testament to management's efforts to reign in expenses.

Looking at the business by its various segments, the most obvious gains came from the exploration and production side of the business. That was expected, though, as the average price for Brent oil increased from $33.90 per barrel this time last year to $53.70 per barrel in the first quarter. What is surprising is that refining and chemical earnings did not experience a sharp decrease. Refining margins in the U.S. have been noticeably weak for 6 straight quarters. This is less of a concern for Total because it has a limited refining and chemical footprint in the U.S.

Total also started breaking out its gas, renewables and power business as a separate segment. This is where the company holds its gas and LNG trading business as well as its investments in solar power. Management noted a weak environment for solar today.

Total's Adjusted net operating income by business segment for Q1 2016, Q4 2016, and Q1 2017. Shows strong gains for Exploration & Production.

DATA SOURCE: TOTAL SA EARNINGS RELEASE. CHART BY AUTHOR.

What happened with Total this past quarter?

  • Upstream production grows 4% year over year. Like the prior quarter, almost all of those gains came from the natural gas side. Continued ramp ups at Angola LNG, Laggan-Tormore, and an acquisition in the Barnett shale fields in East Texas.
  • The company closed a deal for the sale of its Atotech specialty chemical business to a private equity firm for $3.2 billion. It also announced it would sell several mature fields in Gabon for $350 million. 
  • Total continued to be busy on the acquisition front. It obtained seven Gulf of Mexico exploration permits; expanded its working interest in an exploration license for the Vaca Muerta shale reservoir in Argentina; completed a strategic deal with Petrobras (PBR 5.71%) for several offshore licenses and some downstream gas assets; increased its stake in an operating license in Azerbaijan; signed a new supply contract with Japan's largest LNG buyer; bought a 23% equity interest Tellurian (TELL 28.11%), a company looking to build a new LNG export terminal in the U.S.; and committed $2.1 billion to the development of two petrochemical plants, one in the U.S. and one in South Korea.
  • Net debt to equity slid all the way to 22.7%, down from 30% this time last year. The boost in cash from operations and the cash injection from the Atotech sale were the major contributors. Management wants to get that number to 20% by the end of the year, which seems quite reasonable at this point.

What management had to say

On last quarter's conference call, CEO Patrick Pouyanne hinted that the company would start to step up its investment and acquisition activity as he sees an opportunity to take advantage of the lower cost for oil services today compared to the rising price of oil and gas tomorrow. Pouyanne reiterated this point in the company's press release:

[T]he net-debt-to-equity ratio decreased to 22.7%, notably due to the finalization of the $3.2 billion sale of Atotech, The strength of the balance sheet and relentless pursuit of cost reductions allows the Group to launch new projects and acquire resources while fully benefiting from the ongoing deflation in the oil sector.

10-second takeaway

Total seems to be one step ahead of its peers as of late. It was one of the fastest to lower its production costs; it has returned to a respectable return on equity considering the oil price environment; it has more or less restored its balance sheet to pre-crash levels; and today, it's getting ahead of the game with some aggressive moves to invest in new resources.

These high spend rates may cause a slight hit to cash flows in the short-term, but they are the right long-term move to make as they lock in lower cost service contracts as oil prices rise. For investors, that means results for the rest of 2017 could be muted but should make for a stronger company further down the road.