Cenovus' Conoco deal boosts Q2 profit; shares surge 10%

Jul 27, 2017

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Shares of oil producer Cenovus Energy Inc (CVE.TO) surged more than 6 per cent on Thursday after the company reported a second-quarter profit, compared with a year-ago loss, helped by its purchase of ConocoPhillips' Canadian oil sands assets.

Cenovus, which paid US$13.3 billion in March to buy the assets, said the purchase boosted total production by 65 per cent to 436,929 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the quarter. The deal closed on May 17.

ConocoPhillips sold its 50 per cent interest in the Foster Creek Christina Lake oil sands partnership, as well as the majority of its western Canada Deep Basin conventional gas assets.

"With 45 days of contribution from the acquired assets, the company increased adjusted funds flow by 80 per cent, free funds flow by 128 per cent," Cenovus said in a statement.

Cenovus shares were up 6.1 per cent at US$10.56 in early trading, while the benchmark Toronto stock index was up 0.3 per cent.

Cenovus' revenue climbed to $4.04 billion in the second quarter ended June 30, from US$2.75 billion a year earlier.

The Calgary-based oil producer, which is searching for a new CEO to replace Brian Ferguson, reported a net profit of $2.64 billion, or $2.37 per share in the quarter, compared with a loss of $267 million or 5 cents per share, a year earlier.

Despite Thursday's rally, Cenovus shares have lost more than 40 per cent of their value after investors rejected Ferguson's rationale to buy the Conoco assets, at a time when global crude prices remain weak and international energy firms are exiting the region.