King of the castle: Gazprom shares soar, closing the gap with Russia’s most valuable company Sberbank

King of the castle: Gazprom shares soar, closing the gap with Russia’s most valuable company Sberbank
Russian gas company Gazprom's market capitalisation soared from $57bn to $75bn after management doubled its dividend payout. / bne IntelliNews
By Ben Aris in Berlin June 1, 2019

Gazprom stocks soared 30% in a matter of days in May after the management doubled its dividend payout from RUB8 per share to RUB16.6 under pressure from the Ministry of Finance.

It seems that the ministry has the upper hand (and presumably the personal backing of President Vladimir Putin) as one state-owned enterprise (SOE) after another has announced plans to pay out the mandatory 50% of profits as dividends. Most of the SOEs have already achieved this benchmark, but the laggards – Sberbank, VTB, Gazprom and Rosneft – have all increased their payout ratio and say they will pay out 50% by next season.

The spike in Gazprom’s share price lifted its valuation by an astonishing $20bn overnight from $57.1bn on May 14 to $71.4bn a week later. The company’s market capitalisation rose another $4bn through to the end of the month and was $75.1bn as of May 31, breaking through the $75bn mark for the first time in years.

That spike allowed Gazprom to close a lot of the gap with state-owned retail banking behemoth Sberbank, which is currently Russia’s most valuable company worth $77.2bn as of May 31, but only just ahead of Gazprom.

Gazprom is clearly one to keep an eye on now. The company has been through a management shake up recently and it increasingly looks like the Kremlin has lit a fire under the old guard to try and improve profits and efficiency.

Moreover the Kremlin recently threatened to take direct control of the gas giant’s investment programme. Clearly the powers that be are not happy with the way the programmes are being run and these represent a huge part of Russia’s overall fixed investment. Last year Russia’s capital investment was 20% of GDP, of which Gazprom’s pipe building activity accounts for the lion’s share. However, despite the massive investment programmes GDP growth in the first quarter was only 0.8%, which was well below even the most pessimistic forecasts.

The changes at Gazprom have apparently already bourne fruit as the company just reported a 44% jump in its first quarter profits year-on-year to RUB535.9bn ($8.2bn) compared with RUB371.6bn in the same period a year earlier.

That was "mainly due to an increase in sales of gas to Europe and other countries and sales of crude oil and gas condensate and refined products," the company said in a statement this week.

The volume of gas sold in the first quarter actually fell by 13% year-on-year, but a rise in prices—30% when calculated in rubles and by 12% in dollar terms—more than made up for the decline, say analysts.

While most of the attention has been focused on Putin’s 12 national projects as the source of growth in the next few years, clearly the Kremlin is hedging its bets and wants to make sure the more traditional growth drivers – the huge SOEs – are doing their part as well. Market conditions may favour Gazprom’s bottom line at the moment but the Kremlin is keen to squeeze more out of the company by improving the way it is run.  

 

Novatek overtakes Lukoil 

The other big equity market story in May was that the market capitalisation of privately owned Novatek overtook that Lukoil for the first time to become Russia’s most valuable privately owned company, also breaking through the $60bn mark for the first time.

While the SOEs have seen their valuations more or less stagnate, despite the short-term wiggles, the two biggest privately owned hydrocarbon producers have seen their market cap double in the last year and have been running neck-and-neck until this month.

Novatek’s value also jumped after it announced it had closed a string of deals for its third LNG project in the Arctic. Novatek has been on a tear and has become de facto the official agent to carry out Russia’s move into LNG. Russia was producing a mere 10mn tonnes of LNG until recently, making it a minor player in the business, but with two new LNG plants Russia’s output is rapidly increasing and the country hopes to be producing 80mn tonnes a year in the future, which will make it a major player.

Lukoil hasn't done anything wrong. It has been supporting its share price with a share buyback programme which it recently extended and said it would cancel the shares it bought, thus increasing the value of the remaining shares. But the company’s share price fell sharply in May, allowing Novatek to overtake it. Lukoil’s market capitalisation was $57bn as of May 31 against Novatek’s $61bn.

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