http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_25/b3888039_mz011.htmIt's easy to understand why many Americans are angry with Big Oil. Crude oil that peaked at $42 a barrel and $2-a-gallon gasoline have given the oil companies a Mississippi River of cash flow. And even though crude has dropped 11% in recent days, the forces that have stoked prices, including booming energy demand from China and fears of attacks on oil personnel and facilities in Saudi Arabia and Iraq aren't going away anytime soon.
You would expect oil companies to be pumping more oil from existing wells, drilling new wells in current fields, and boosting exploration budgets. After all, a basic rule of economics is that higher prices bring forth more supply. More output by the supermajors would loosen OPEC's grip on world markets and lower prices. Yet this year, worldwide exploration and production (E&P) spending will grow only 9%, up from the 4% first planned, according to Lehman Brothers Inc. (LEH ). That's a relatively weak response to a 2004 surge that sent oil prices up 30% over the 2000-03 average. Ten years ago, a similar runup would have boosted E&P budgets by over 20%, says Lehman analyst James D. Crandell.
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Whether mergers are mainly an effect of Big Oil's conservatism or an enabler, they're under more scrutiny now that oil prices are sky-high. The merger wave of 1998-2001 united Exxon with Mobil, Chevron with Texaco, BP with Amoco and Arco, Conoco with Phillips, and France's Total with PetroFina and Elf. Jon Meade Huntsman, founder of chemicals maker Huntsman LLC in Salt Lake City, recalls warning people that mergers would lead to high oil prices. He says costly oil is damaging the chemical, airline, and trucking industries while enriching a handful of giant companies. Says Huntsman: "We've got a monopoly that's in effect more dangerous than during the Rockefeller era" of a century ago.
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Oil execs argue that bigger means stronger. "Consolidation has given companies the financial strength and technological capabilities to take on bigger risks," says John Browne, CEO of BP, the former British Petroleum. Trouble is, there's little evidence that they're doing so. Far from raising money to pursue opportunities, oil companies are paying down debt, buying back shares, and hoarding cash. Exxon Mobil Corp., for instance, earned record profits in 2003 and ended the year with nearly $11 billion in cash. It then piled on an additional $5 billion in cash in the first three months of 2004.
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Mergers may have also hurt competition in refining and marketing. When capacity is tight, like now, refiners can hike prices and boost profits by taking part of their capacity offline, says Severin Borenstein, director of the University of California Energy Institute in Berkeley. Although there's no proof they've done so, the risk is greater with fewer players in the market. With joint ventures dominating downstream operations such as refining and storage, the competition's inventories are no secret, critics charge. "You don't need a smoky back room. All you have to do is go to a computer," says Jamie Court, president of the nonprofit Foundation for Taxpayer & Consumer Rights.
Even the closure of a single refinery can cause trouble. When Shell Oil Co. (RD ) said that it planned to shut rather than sell a refinery in Bakersfield, Calif., critics charged it with trying to boost prices by reducing supply. Under pressure, Shell agreed to put the refinery up for sale. It says it has received 22 inquiries -- but still plans to shut it down by Sept. 30 "based on economic viability" if there's no deal.
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Does this behavior resemble the deregulated power providers in California?