BREAKINGVIEWS-Eni’s green shoots are taking time to blossom

Reuters03-28

(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.)

By Lisa Jucca

MILAN, March 28 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Claudio Descalzi is steering a different course to most European oil bosses. While counterparts at Shell and BP have been re-emphasising their oil credentials, the CEO of $53 billion Eni is balancing a focus on gas with a plan to squeeze value out of his greenest units. He may be on to something, but his shareholders are yet to be convinced.

Descalzi, who has now headed Eni for a decade, has been thinking creatively about how to fund the group’s transition away from his main fossil fuel operations. He has been building out separate units around more carbon-friendly businesses with the aim of partial sales or listings, like renewable energy unit Plenitude and biofuels arm Enilive. On March 14, the Eni boss doubled down by adding carbon capture and biochemicals to the list of candidates for a spinoff.

He’s already made some progress. In December Descalzi’s deal to sell a 9% stake to specialised fund Energy Infrastructure Partners valued Plenitude, which groups wind and solar power with a retail energy business, at 10 billion euros including debt. That’s 10 times Plenitude’s expected EBITDA this year, nearly three times Eni’s own group multiple and above that of established European renewable players. With a similar EBITDA forecast of 1 billion euros for 2024, Enilive may aspire to fetch at least 7 billion euros in a listing, in line with companies exposed to the biofuel segment as per LSEG data.

Even so, Eni shares have underperformed the main STOXX Europe 600 Index since the start of the year and are trading pretty much in line with where they stood five years ago. At 3.5 times its expected 2024 EBITDA, the Italian company’s shares lag European peers TotalEnergies and Shell, which trade around 4 times, and U.S. giant Exxon Mobil

, on over 6 times.

There are several reasons why. Eni is more gas-exposed than rivals. European prices of the fossil fuel for immediate delivery are now back near the 20 euros per megawatt hour level at which they stood before Europe was hit by the pandemic and war, while oil prices have stayed elevated. Secondly, the Italian government, Eni’s top investor via a 32% stake, has flagged the possibility of a sale, perhaps of up to 4%, to cut its debt. The uncertainty does not encourage investors to buy Eni shares beforehand.

But the biggest single factor is that Eni’s business “satellites” are yet to prove they can be fully funded independent entities. Some, like the carbon capture arm, are little more than a concept, and Eni’s chemical unit is struggling. While Plenitude and Enilive have impressive-sounding valuations, they are yet to actually list. The vast majority of Eni’s 21 billion euro EBITDA last year came from fossil fuel-related businesses, and Descalzi’s $4.9 billion swoop for Neptune Energy last year saw him bulking up in gas.

Descalzi’s hunt for value in energy transition-related businesses could yet work. But given his investors remain stuck with a lowly valuation, his green shoots at some point have to start blooming.

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CONTEXT NEWS

Italy energy group Eni said on March 14 it would create separate units specialising in carbon capture and biochemicals, adding to already existing renewable energy and biofuel subsidiaries.

The 49 billion euro company plans to unlock value by eventually selling stakes in the units or list them, at higher multiples, on the stock exchange under its so-called “satellite model”.

The Italian group, 32%-owned by the Italian state, agreed in December to sell a 9% stake in Plenitude, its renewable energy unit, to an infrastructure fund for a valuation of 10 billion euros including debt.

Shares in Eni trade around 7% below where they stood five years ago, according to LSEG data, and at a discount against European energy rivals including TotalEnergies and Shell.

Ithaca Energy said on March 27 it has been given a four-week exclusivity period by Italy’s Eni to make an offer for UK exploration and production assets. In return, Ithaca would issue new shares to Eni, which will become a major shareholder by holding some 38% to 39% of the enlarged share capital of Ithaca.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Graphic: Eni trades below both European and US rivals

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(Editing by George Hay and Oliver Taslic)

((For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on lisa.jucca@thomsonreuters.com ; Reuters Messaging: lisa.jucca.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))

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