The Scotsman: Shell wipes 120m more
barrels from reserves
JIM STANTON
DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR
Posted 25 May 04
Key points
• Downward revision is fourth this year
• Firm’s reserves 4.47bn barrels lower than thought
• Company subject of probe by US watchdog
Key quote
"I am assuming this is the final drawing of the line under it [the restatement
scandal]" - Brendan Wilders, Oriel Securities analyst
Story in full: CRISIS-HIT oil giant Shell has trimmed a further 120
million barrels from its proven reserves - the fourth revision it has made this
year to the figure.
The Anglo-Dutch firm sparked a dive in its share price when it warned in January
that it had overbooked its proven reserves of oil and gas.
As the scandal - which has to date cost three senior Shell executives their jobs
- rumbles on, the world’s third-biggest oil company said it was
now saying its 2003 reserves would be 4.47 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe)
lower than originally thought. That is 120m boe more than Shell indicated in
April.
Shell said the latest downgrade related to the way it recognised holdings in
Canada and was due to accountancy policy changes. It added that the revision
would have no impact on its reported cash flows.
The oil group has had to subtract an amount from its proven reserves in Canada
to account for royalty payments to mineral rights holders in the country - a
policy it already uses in the United States.
However, there are likely to be further fears from investors over what
else the company may spring on them as it battles to restore its tattered
reputation.
Overall, Shell has now revised down its reserves by 23 per cent since it made
its initial estimates in 2002.
Jeroen van der Veer, who took over as chairman from the ousted Sir Philip Watts,
said in a statement that auditors had given "unqualified audit opinions" for the
latest numbers.
Brendan Wilders, an analyst at Oriel Securities, said: "I am assuming this is
the final drawing of the line under it [the restatement scandal]."
The company also said it would publish its delayed annual report on Friday,
after shelving the original publication while it concluded an internal inquiry
into oil and gas reserve cuts. Shell also said its investigation by US
regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission was continuing.
Shell spooked investors in January when it announced it was slashing its proven
oil and gas reserves by 20 per cent. Further smaller reserve cuts followed and
while not as dramatic as the first one, have dealt further blows to
shareholder confidence.
Among the corporate casualties left in the wake of the shock January
announcement were chairman Sir Philip Watts, oil and gas chief Walter van de
Vijver and chief financial officer Judy Boynton. Regulators in both the UK and
the US are investigating the reserves bungle and the company also faces the
prospect of a slew of class action lawsuits in the US and the threat of criminal
charges against the board.
Mr Van der Veer said the latest restatement reflected a "stricter adoption of
some specific accounting standards" after talks between the group and America’s
Securities and Exchange Commission about its financial statements.
Crispin Odey, who runs London-based hedge fund Odey Asset Management, remained
sceptical on prospects for oil majors, despite soaring crude oil prices which
have enabled companies such as BP and Shell to report bumper profits.
Mr Odey said the Shell scandal had raised questions about reserves accounting
throughout the whole industry.
http://business.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=595222004