Seadrill Fails to Impress Ahead of Growth Cycle

Updated

The offshore drilling market has definitely stabilized over the past year and now we're back to looking at small details like utilization rates instead of wondering about big issues like regulation and oil spills. Seadrill's (NYS: SDRL) results released today are just another example of this and the market's reaction shows a more subdued response to earnings from shareholders.

The third quarter wasn't bad for Seadrill; it just wasn't outstanding. Revenue fell slightly from the second quarter to $1.09 billion, operating profit fell from $483 million to $413 million, and net income was $216 million, or $0.40 per share. Analysts had expected $1.11 billion in revenue and $0.68 in earnings per share, although this was affected by a loss of $158 million on financial items and a loss associated with ownership in Archer Limited.

A few weeks ago I highlighted that growth momentum was slowing in the deepwater space and results at Seadrill seems to keep that thesis alive. Noble (NYS: NE) , Diamond Offshore (NYS: DO) , Transocean (NYS: RIG) , and Seadrill all saw steady dayrates but little growth in ultra-deepwater. At rates of $550,000-$650,000 per day for rigs, this slow growth isn't a red flag but it will put more focus on utilization rates. In the third quarter, it is what hurt Seadrill, which only utilized 82% of floater days, down from 88% in the second quarter.


Consistent with competitors, the jack-up market also looks like it is steadily improving. The company's utilization has remained above 90% and dayrates continue to improve.

Dividend play
For most investors, a big reason to buy Seadrill is its dividend. Well, the company not only maintained its $0.85 dividend for the third quarter, it will pay an accelerated dividend in the fourth quarter to avoid higher taxes on dividends for shareholders.

Potential growth on the horizon
Seadrill still has 22 units under construction and deliveries for the nine ultra-deepwater units will begin next quarter and continue through 2014. This should fuel strong revenue growth and, with payback of drillships of about three years, we should see a strong jump in earnings as well.

The company also launched its MLP, Seadrill Partners (NYS: SDLP) , during the third quarter, which it thinks will help lower its cost of capital. Seadrill's 75.7% stake is worth $831 million based on the market price; in the future it hopes to push deepwater rigs off its balance sheet onto the MLP's to save costs.

To learn even more about the strengths and weaknesses of Seadrill, as well as what to expect from the company going forward, be sure to check out this brand-new premium report put together by one of our top Stock Advisor analysts. Click here to get started.

The article Seadrill Fails to Impress Ahead of Growth Cycle originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Travis Hoium manages an account that owns shares of Seadrill. You can follow Travis on Twitter at @FlushDrawFool, check out his personal stock holdings or follow his CAPS picks at TMFFlushDraw. The Motley Fool owns shares of Transocean and Seadrill. Motley Fool newsletter services recommend Seadrill. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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