TIDMSCL
Schlumberger Limited (NYSE:SLB) today reported results for
full-year 2016 and the fourth quarter of 2016.
Full-Year Results
(Stated in millions, except per share amounts)
Twelve Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015 Year-on-year
Revenue $ 27,810 $ 35,475 -22%
Pretax operating income $ 3,273 $ 6,510 -50%
Pretax operating margin 11.8 % 18.4 % -658 bps
Net income (loss) (GAAP basis) $ (1,687 ) $ 2,072 n/m
Net income, excluding $ 1,550 $ 4,290 -64%
charges and credits*
Diluted EPS (loss per $ (1.24 ) $ 1.63 n/m
share) (GAAP basis)
Diluted EPS, excluding $ 1.14 $ 3.37 -66%
charges and credits*
*These are non-GAAP financial measures. See section
below entitled "Charges & Credits" for details.
n/m = not meaningful
Full-year 2016 revenue of $27.8 billion decreased 22%
year-on-year, despite three quarters of activity from the Cameron
Group that contributed $4.2 billion in revenue. Excluding Cameron,
consolidated revenue declined 34%.
Full-year 2016 pretax operating income of $3.3 billion,
including the $653 million contribution from the Cameron Group,
decreased 50% year-on-year. Consolidated margin fell 658 basis
points (bps) to 11.8%. Excluding Cameron, consolidated margin fell
727 bps to 11.1%.
Fourth-Quarter Results
(Stated in millions, except per share amounts)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015 Sequential Year-on-year
Revenue $ 7,107 $ 7,019 $ 7,744 1% -8%
Pretax operating income $ 810 $ 815 $ 1,288 -1% -37%
Pretax operating margin 11.4 % 11.6 % 16.6 % -21 bps -523 bps
Net income (loss) (GAAP basis) $ (204 ) $ 176 $ (1,016 ) n/m -80%
Net income, excluding $ 379 $ 353 $ 819 7% -54%
charges and credits*
Diluted EPS (loss per $ (0.15 ) $ 0.13 $ (0.81 ) n/m n/m
share) (GAAP basis)
Diluted EPS, excluding $ 0.27 $ 0.25 $ 0.65 8% -58%
charges and credits*
*These are non-GAAP financial measures. See section
below entitled "Charges & Credits" for details.
n/m = not meaningful
Schlumberger Chairman and CEO Paal Kibsgaard commented,
"Fourth-quarter sequential revenue growth of 1% was driven by
strong activity in the Middle East and North America, which was
largely offset by continued weakness in Latin America and seasonal
activity declines in Europe, CIS and Africa.
"Among the business segments, the fourth-quarter revenue
increase was led by the Production Group, which grew 5% due to
increased hydraulic fracturing activity in the Middle East and in
North America land. Reservoir Characterization Group revenue
increased 1% sequentially due to strong Testing & Process
activity in Kuwait that outweighed the seasonal decline in Wireline
activity in Norway and Russia. Drilling Group revenue was flat
sequentially as continued strong directional drilling activity in
North America land was offset by activity declines in
Europe/CIS/Africa and Middle East & Asia. Cameron Group revenue
was also flat sequentially, with growth in OneSubsea and Surface
Systems offset by reduced product sales from Valves &
Measurement and from a declining order backlog in Drilling
Systems.
"Pretax operating margin was essentially flat sequentially at
11.4% as margin improvements in the Production and Drilling Groups
were balanced by contractions in the Cameron and Reservoir
Characterization Groups. In recent quarters, we have managed to
stabilize our business from an activity and capacity standpoint,
and this has subsequently allowed us to refine and reduce our
support structure to reflect current activity and service pricing
levels. This has led us to record a $536 million restructuring
charge in the fourth quarter. We also recorded $139 million of
charges relating to the Cameron integration and a currency
devaluation loss in Egypt.
"We maintain our constructive view of the oil markets, as the
tightening of the supply and demand balance continued in the fourth
quarter, as seen by a steady draw in OECD stocks. This trend was
further strengthened by the December OPEC and non-OPEC agreements
to cut production, which should, with a certain lag, accelerate
inventory draws, support a further increase in oil prices, and lead
to increased E&P investments.
"We expect the growth in investments to initially be led by land
operators in North America, where continued negative free cash
flows seem less of a constraint, as external funding is readily
available and the pursuit of shorter-term equity value takes
precedence over full-cycle return on investment. E&P spending
surveys currently indicate that 2017 NAM E&P investments will
increase by around 30%, led by the Permian basin, which should lead
to both higher activity and a long overdue recovery in service
industry pricing.
"In the international markets, operators are more focused on
full-cycle returns and E&P investments are generally governed
by the operators' free cash flow generation. Based on this, we
expect the 2017 recovery in the international markets to start off
more slowly, driven by the economic reality facing the E&P
industry. This will likely lead to a third successive year of
underinvestment, with a continued low rate of new project approvals
and an accelerating production decline in the aging production
base. These factors together are increasing the likelihood of a
significant supply deficit in the medium term, which can only be
avoided by a broad-based global increase in E&P spending, which
we expect will start unfolding in the later parts of 2017 and
leading into 2018.
"Against this backdrop and following nine consecutive quarters
of relentless workforce reductions, cost cutting, and restructuring
efforts, we are excited to restore focus on the pursuit of growth
and improving returns. As we navigated this downturn, we have
streamlined our cost and support structure, continued to drive the
underlying efficiency and quality of our business workflows,
expanded our offering through maintaining investments in R&E,
and made a series of strategic acquisitions. The combination of
these actions has enabled us to further strengthen our global
market position during the downturn, which will enable us to
maintain and extend our well established margin and earnings
leadership in both North America and in all parts of the
International markets going forward.
"While earnings growth continues to be a very important
financial driver for us, full-cycle cash generation is even more
critical, and here, we remain unique in the industry. Over the past
two years of this downturn, we have generated $7.5 billion in free
cash flow, which is more than the rest of our major competitors
combined. Furthermore, we have returned $8.0 billion to our
shareholders through dividends and share buy-backs. This clearly
demonstrates the full-cycle robustness of Schlumberger, the careful
management of our business, and the strength of our executional
capabilities."
Other Events
During the quarter, Schlumberger repurchased 1.5 million shares
of its common stock at an average price of $78.21 per share for a
total purchase price of $116 million.
On January 5, 2017, Schlumberger announced the acquisition of
Peak Well Systems, a leading specialist enterprise in the design
and development of advanced downhole tools for flow control, well
intervention, and well integrity.
On January 19, 2017, the Company's Board of Directors approved a
quarterly cash dividend of $0.50 per share of outstanding common
stock, payable on April 17, 2017 to stockholders of record on
February 15, 2017.
Consolidated Revenue by Geography
(Stated in millions)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Sequential
North America $ 1,765 $ 1,699 4%
Latin America 952 992 -4%
Europe/CIS/Africa 1,834 1,872 -2%
Middle East & Asia 2,494 2,385 5%
Eliminations & other 62 71 -13%
$ 7,107 $ 7,019 1%
North America revenue $ 1,765 $ 1,699 4%
International revenue $ 5,280 $ 5,249 1%
Fourth-quarter revenue of $7.1 billion increased 1% sequentially
with North America growing 4% and International increasing 1%.
North America
In North America, revenue increased 4% sequentially, on
increased land activity while offshore declined. Excluding Cameron
Group results, land revenue experienced double-digit growth driven
by strong hydraulic fracturing activity as stage count increased,
and higher uptake of Drilling & Measurements, Bits &
Drilling Tools, and M-I SWACO products and services as rig count
increased. Revenue on land in the US also posted double-digit
growth on higher activity and a modest pricing recovery, while
revenue in Western Canada grew strongly from a winter ramp-up in
activity in addition to higher sales of artificial lift products.
Revenue also increased from year-end WesternGeco multiclient
seismic license sales that were, however, muted when compared to
prior years. Sales from Valves & Measurement and Drilling
Systems declined.
International Areas
International revenue increased 1% sequentially led by strong
growth in the Middle East & Asia Area, which was partially
offset by continued weakness in the Latin America Area and seasonal
activity declines in the Europe/CIS/Africa Area.
Middle East & Asia Area revenue increased 5% sequentially.
This was mainly due to strong fracturing and Integrated Production
Services (IPS) activity on unconventional land resource
developments and increased productivity from land seismic crews in
Saudi Arabia. Revenue in Egypt increased from higher perforating,
while Qatar grew from increased horizontal logging work. These
increases, however, were partially offset by declines in Drilling
& Measurements and Integrated Drilling Services (IDS) activity
and lower equipment sales in the India GeoMarket as projects were
completed and well campaigns delayed.
Revenue in the Latin America Area declined 4% sequentially,
mainly in the Mexico & Central America GeoMarket where customer
budget constraints led to a sharp drop in overall rig count that
impacted onshore and offshore operations, affecting both deepwater
and shallow-water projects. Revenue in Mexico also declined
following the strong marine surveys and multiclient license seismic
sales last quarter. Revenue in Argentina decreased as
unconventional resource development work was affected by
unfavorable weather conditions and other delays. These declines,
however, were partially mitigated by strong drilling and project
activity in the Peru, Colombia & Ecuador GeoMarket as the rig
count increased by 46% following the rise in oil prices.
Europe/CIS/Africa Area revenue decreased 2% sequentially mainly
due to the seasonal conclusion of peak summer drilling activity in
Russia and exploration services campaigns in Norway that impacted
all Technologies, led by Wireline, Drilling & Measurements, and
M-I SWACO. The Sub-Saharan Africa GeoMarket contributed to the Area
revenue decline as rigs demobilized and projects were completed,
mainly in Angola and Congo. These decreases were partially offset
by strong OneSubsea project activity and execution.
Reservoir Characterization Group
(Stated in millions, except margin percentages)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015 Sequential Year-on-year
Revenue $ 1,699 $ 1,689 $ 2,193 1% -23%
Pretax $ 316 $ 322 $ 521 -2% -39%
operating
income
Pretax 18.6 % 19.1 % 23.8 % -49 bps -519 bps
operating
margin
Reservoir Characterization Group revenue was $1.7 billion, with
76% coming from international operations. Revenue was 1% higher
sequentially due to the ramp-up in activity on the early production
facilities projects in Kuwait, higher Wireline perforating activity
in Egypt, increased horizontal logging work in Qatar, and increased
software license and maintenance sales. These effects were
partially offset by the seasonal decrease in Wireline activity in
the Northern Hemisphere.
Pretax operating margin of 19% decreased 49 bps sequentially as
the increased contribution from software and maintenance sales was
more than offset by the decline in high-margin Wireline exploration
activities.
Reservoir Characterization Group performance was boosted by a
number of Integrated Services Management (ISM) projects, new
contract awards, technology deployments, and transformation
efficiencies during the quarter.
In Ecuador, Schlumberger provided ISM for Petroamazonas EP and
Sinopec to optimize drilling on the Tiputini project. The Bits
& Drilling Tools ONYX* polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC)
cutter and Stinger* conical diamond element technologies enabled
better steerability and stability as well as longer and faster
runs. In addition, Wireline Dielectric Scanner* multifrequency
dielectric dispersion service directly measured water volume and
textural rock information while the Dual-Packer Module isolated the
interval for the MDT* modular formation dynamics tester tool.
Furthermore, PowerJet Nova* extradeep penetrating shaped charges
delivered improved efficiency. The customer reduced total drilling
time to 7 1/2 days from the expected 11 days, equivalent to an
estimated cost savings of $250,000.
In Egypt, Belayim Petroleum Company (Petrobel), a joint venture
between Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation and IEOC Production
B.V., awarded Schlumberger Testing & Process a contract valued
at $70 million for the engineering, procurement, construction,
commissioning, and operation of a facility for the Zohr gas field.
The facility, which is expected to be completed 11 months from the
date of the award, will provide accelerated production of gas
during the first phase of the project. In addition, Testing &
Process used a combination of technologies for Petrobel to complete
a production test of the first offshore appraisal well of the Zohr
discovery in the Shorouk block. Working at a water depth of 1,450
m, the production test string included a SenTREE 3* subsea test
tree combined with Muzic* wireless telemetry technology, which
activated the SCAR* inline independent reservoir fluid sampling and
Quartet* downhole reservoir testing systems. The use of Testing
Manager* well testing real-time data monitoring and collaboration
software enabled real-time transient analysis and optimization of
the well test program.
In Mexico, Pemex awarded WesternGeco a 2,400-km2 full-azimuth
ocean-bottom-cable project over the Canin Suuk field in the
shallow-water Bay of Campeche. The field is in an area with high
prospectivity within their exploration portfolio and requires new
seismic technology to provide better imaging due to its salt
tectonics complexity. The WesternGeco vessel WG Tasman, newly
converted to ocean-bottom operations, will use Q-Seabed*
multicomponent seabed seismic technology that has a system designed
to ensure uniform coupling in all directions. Acquisition began in
2016 and will continue for approximately one year.
Offshore Norway, Wireline introduced a combination of
technologies for Lundin Norway to overcome challenging formation
geology and reduce operating time in a well in the Barents Sea. The
potential presence of large caves that were not visible via surface
seismic imaging required the use of high-resolution imaging in,
around, and beyond the borehole. Technologies included the hDVS
distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) system using a wireline cable
with integrated optical fibers, a Z-Trac* downhole vibrator, and a
VSI* versatile seismic imager all within a single toolstring. The
data acquired by having the vibrator and imager downhole enabled
the customer to see potential hazards ahead of the drill bit and
mitigate drilling risk. The DAS technology reduced operating time
to 30 minutes compared with conventional VSP acquisition that can
require up to eight hours.
Offshore the UAE, Testing & Process deployed a combination
of technologies for Al Hosn Gas in the Hail and Gasha fields. The
combination included an eFire-TCP* tubing-conveyed perforating
electronic firing head and new perforation correlation technology,
both enabled by Muzic* wireless telemetry. The wirelessly-enabled
depth correlation was consistent with the traditional wireline
gamma ray and casing collar locator method. In addition, real-time
downhole data helped determine reservoir properties, assessed well
performance during and after stimulation, and supported downhole
sampling decisions to reduce the original well test program by 18
hours.
The transformation program enabled reductions in equipment
numbers and tool reliability repair costs for Schlumberger by using
Technology Lifecycle Management (TLM). In Saudi Arabia for example,
Schlumberger at its Middle East Center for Reliability and
Efficiency (CRE) in Dhahran implemented a new maintenance system
for Testing & Process Services that decreased the overall cost
of equipment repair by 48% and improved turnaround time by 21% in
the first three months of operations. In Australia, WesternGeco
deployed its newly developed eSource marine seismic energy source
on the Amazon Conqueror for a multiclient survey. TLM methodology
delivers seismic source reliability improvements for all
WesternGeco sources including the eSource project which is using an
acquisition technique that depends on high source reliability to
ensure maximum operational efficiency. From 2014 to 2016, the
reliability of WesternGeco sources improved 47%.
Drilling Group
(Stated in millions, except
margin percentages)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015 Sequential Year-on-year
Revenue $ 2,013 $ 2,021 $ 2,953 - -32%
Pretax operating $ 234 $ 218 $ 494 7% -53%
income
Pretax operating 11.6 % 10.8 % 16.7 % 81 bps -511 bps
margin
Drilling Group revenue of $2.0 billion, of which 76% came from
the international markets, was flat sequentially as the continued
strong directional drilling activity in North America land was
offset by lower drilling activity in the International Areas. The
improvement in North America revenue came from increased uptake of
Drilling & Measurements, Bits & Drilling Tools, and M-I
SWACO products and services. The decreased revenue in the
International Areas was due to completed Drilling & Measurement
and IDS projects in India and Iraq, while the winter slowdown in
Russia and Norway affected Drilling & Measurements and M-I
SWACO activity.
Pretax operating margin of 12% expanded 81 bps sequentially
despite revenue being flat. This was due to pricing improvements
from greater uptake of drilling technologies on increasing activity
on land in the US which mainly affected Drilling & Measurements
and Bits & Drilling Tools. Margin also expanded as a result of
operational execution in IDS, M-I SWACO, and Bits & Drilling
Tools and through continuing transformation-related benefits as
resources were aligned to match the shape of the recovery.
A combination of IDS projects, contract awards, new technology
deployments, and transformation efficiencies contributed to
Drilling Group performance in the fourth quarter.
In the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region, IDS delivered a
40% drilling performance improvement in the first three quarters of
2016 compared with non-integrated drilling services in similar
fields. The improvement is based on the feet drilled per hour below
the rotary table. This achievement was enabled by a combination of
drilling technologies, such as PowerDrive Archer* high build rate
and PowerDrive Xceed* ruggedized rotary steerable systems to
optimize drilling times in horizontal wells and during extended
reach drilling. This included the use of RigHour* multiwell
drilling operational efficiency analysis, and ROPO* rate of
penetration optimization software, which adjusts drilling
parameters to maximize on-bottom drilling performance. Schlumberger
combined these technologies with integrated workflows overseen by
multidisciplinary domain experts in the Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi
Drilling Technology Integration Centers to reduce both drilling and
overall development costs.
In Norway, Statoil awarded Schlumberger an eight-year contract
with optional periods to deliver integrated well construction
services for one of its Cat-J jackup rigs being built for
operations in the harsh environments and shallow wells of the
Norwegian Continental Shelf. Schlumberger will provide planning and
execution for directional drilling, measurement- and
logging-while-drilling, mud logging, drilling and completion
fluids, cementing, pumping, slot recovery and fishing, electrical
wireline logging, waste management, completions, downhole
mechanical isolation, mechanical well wash and tubing-conveyed
perforating for the Gullfaks satellites field with operations
planned for start-up later this year.
In the Norwegian sector of the North Sea, Drilling &
Measurements used the GeoSphere* reservoir mapping-while-drilling
service for ExxonMobil to map a complex injectite reservoir and
effectively geosteer into target sands in the Balder field. Given
two goals-avoid costly pilot holes in development wells that often
failed to provide sufficient information to help land the producer
wells and avoid setting the casing in thin injectite
sands-GeoSphere technology mapped the top of the massive sands from
more than 20 m total vertical depth above and detected the
oil/water contact while landing the 12 ¼-in section before
penetrating the reservoir. For the 8 ½-in reservoir section, the
customer was able to plan a geosteering strategy ahead of the bit
by combining seismic interpretation and GeoSphere mapping results,
and thus increased the productivity of the wells.
In West Texas, Drilling & Measurements used a combination of
technologies to establish a new record in drilling performance for
an operator in the Permian basin. The bottomhole assembly included
PowerDrive Orbit* rotary steerable systems to optimize directional
drilling and a DynaForce* high-performance drilling motor, which
provides the highest torque at the bit and outperforms conventional
motors in high-volume drilling. In addition, SlimPulse* retrievable
MWD service provided direction, inclination, toolface, and gamma
ray measurements in real time for mud-pulse telemetry. The customer
drilled a 7,814-ft lateral in less than 22 hours, which surpassed
the customer's previous footage record in the Permian basin by 47%.
As a result, the customer reduced drilling time by 18 hours
compared with a previous lateral.
In Ecuador, a Drilling & Measurements PowerDrive*X6 rotary
steerable system with customized Smith PDC bit technologies was
deployed for Orion Energy to improve drilling performance in a well
in the Ocano field. With remote support from experts at the
Drilling Technology Integration Center, the operations team drilled
6,400 ft of the 16-in well section in 30 hours, increasing the rate
of penetration (ROP) to 201 ft/hr compared with 136 ft/hr in
similar wells, a 48% net increase. As a result, the customer saved
approximately $100,000 in drilling costs by completing the well
section two days earlier than originally planned.
In Egypt, Drilling & Measurements used the GeoSphere*
reservoir mapping-while-drilling service for Belayim Petroleum
Company (Petrobel), a joint venture between Egyptian General
Petroleum Corporation and IEOC Production B.V., to eliminate a
pilot hole in the Abu Rudeis field. An unconformity at the top of
the oil-bearing sandstone initially required a pilot hole to
determine intermediate casing depth while pressurized shales above
the target zone required a high mud weight that made penetration of
the target sand challenging due to potential mud circulation
losses. GeoSphere technology used deep directional electromagnetic
measurements to reveal subsurface bedding and fluid contact details
more than 100 ft from the wellbore, which helped manage the
geological uncertainty and drilling risk. By eliminating the pilot
hole, the customer saved approximately $1.8 million.
In Russia, Bits & Drilling Tools used a combination of
drillbit technologies for LLC LUKOIL-Komi, a subsidiary production
enterprise of PAO LUKOIL, to eliminate four bit trips and increase
the ROP in an offset well in the Kyrtaelskoye field in the
Timano-Pechora region. ONYX 360* rolling PDC cutter technology
increased bit durability due to its 360° of rotation while Stinger*
conical diamond elements provided superior impact strength and wear
resistance in this hard and highly abrasive sand formation. In
addition, due to its modular design, the Drilling &
Measurements PowerPak* steerable motor was customized to the
drilling environment. As a result, the customer achieved an average
ROP of 9.3 m/h, a 40% increase compared with the maximum ROP
achieved in offset wells. Furthermore, the customer saved five days
of operations by drilling the 8 5/8-in section in 15 days instead
of the expected 20 days.
In the Neuquén basin in Argentina, M-I SWACO used KLA-SHIELD*
enhanced-polymer water-base drilling fluid for Wintershall
Argentina to drill a 3,281-ft lateral in a challenging formation
defined by abnormally high pore pressure, natural fractures,
stresses, and general geomechanical complexity. The KLA-SHIELD
system optimized with STARGLIDE ROP-enhancing lubricant and
DRILZONE rate-of-penetration-enhancing antiaccretion additive,
provided an alternative to non-aqueous drilling fluids. In
addition, VIRTUAL HYDRAULICS* drilling fluid simulation software
traced the well trajectory, performed torque and drag simulations,
evaluated the rheology in terms of equivalent circulating density,
and optimized hole cleaning. The customer benefitted by drilling
the well and lateral in 70 days without any caving, swelling, or
tight wellbore issues.
The transformation program enabled an increase in reliability
and efficiency as well as product and service delivery. Design,
engineering, and maintenance teams in Drilling & Measurements
at the Middle East CRE in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, collaborated to
create ruggedized modular housings for measurement-while-drilling
tools and decrease their susceptibility to movement and wear in a
high-shock environment. As a result, the reliability of ImPulse*
integrated MWD platform tools increased 240% and the reliability of
adnVISION* azimuthal density neutron service tools increased by 47%
in the first six months of the CRE's operation.
Production Group
(Stated in millions, except
margin percentages)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015 Sequential Year-on-year
Revenue $ 2,179 $ 2,083 $ 2,632 5% -17%
Pretax operating $ 132 $ 98 $ 302 34% -56%
income
Pretax operating 6.0 % 4.7 % 11.5 % 134 bps -542 bps
margin
Production Group revenue of $2.2 billion, of which 72% came from
the international markets, was 5% higher sequentially from strong
fracturing activity on unconventional resource developments on land
in the Middle East, mainly in Saudi Arabia, and in North America
where the land rig count and fracturing stage count increased.
Revenue on land in the US increased both on volume and on a modest
pricing recovery. Revenue in Western Canada grew from a seasonal
winter ramp-up in activity in addition to higher sales of
artificial lift products. Cementing revenue was up 30% mostly in
North America and IPS grew three-fold primarily in the
International Areas.
Pretax operating margin of 6% increased 134 bps sequentially on
increased activity, which drove efficiency and better operational
execution in the Middle East. The modest pricing recovery on land
in the US also contributed to the margin expansion.
Production Group results benefitted from contract awards, new
technology deployments, and transformation initiatives to improve
operational efficiency during the quarter.
The Kuwait Oil Company awarded Schlumberger a contract for the
supply and installation of ResFlow* inflow control devices to be
used in sandstone reservoirs and in a 140-well carbonate
development project. ResFlow technology helps maintain uniform
inflow rates across the entire interval in openhole completions,
even in the presence of permeability variations and thief zones.
These two technically challenging developments require reliable
equipment that can operate in complex wells in order to control and
understand reservoir behavior.
In China, Well Services used a combination of technologies for
the Schlumberger-CoPower joint venture to overcome a tight,
under-pressurized gas reservoir in the Ordos basin. FiberFRAC*
fiber-based fracturing fluid technology created a fiber network
within the fracturing fluid, providing a mechanical means to
transport and place the proppant. In addition, composite fluid from
BroadBand* unconventional reservoir completion services minimized
potential screenouts and optimized proppant distribution. The
customer achieved an average production of nearly 2,280 Mscf/d for
11 wells compared with six offset wells that used conventional
fracturing fluids and had an average production of 812 Mscf/d.
In the UAE, Well Services HiWAY* flow-channel fracturing
technique and UltraMARINE* seawater-base fracturing fluid were
deployed in an offshore environment to stimulate low-permeability,
high-stress source rock for Dubai Petroleum. Eight proppant
fracturing jobs were successfully placed with over half a million
pounds pumped. These are the first multistage, offshore source rock
hydraulic fracturing treatments done in the world, and the eight
jobs were completed in 40 hours.
In Ecuador, Well Services used the Invizion Evaluation* well
integrity service for Consortium Shushufindi to overcome wellbore
integrity challenges in the Shushufindi field. The integration of
multiwell data using the Techlog* wellbore software platform
enabled Invizion Evaluation technology to identify post-placement
channeling and differential crossflow between target sands. After
optimization of the original drilling program with improved cement
formulation and additives, the well showed no sign of
post-placement channeling. As a result, the customer avoided
potential remedial operational costs equivalent to $450,000.
Offshore Indonesia, Schlumberger used the MZ-Xpress* system for
performing multizone fracturing and gravel packing for ENI on the
Jangkrik project. Two MZ-Xpress systems were each installed in a
single trip to provide multizone sand control in a well featuring
five producing layers across two different casing sizes. The
customer saved approximately 6.5 days of rig time over four zones
of completion, equivalent to $5.1 million in cost savings.
In North America, the transformation enabled decreases in the
cost of asset ownership and improved operating efficiencies for
Well Services. To optimize the inventory of materials and supplies,
a new Supply Planning organization analyzed spend data to ensure
stock is on hand for commonly used items and maximized sharing
opportunities. In June 2016, only four months after its creation,
the organization reduced stock on hand by 20%. Moreover, the use of
Logistics Control towers that centralize management and delivery of
field supplies, such as proppant for hydraulic fracturing
operations, minimized costs for operating locations by conducting
all of the planning, tactical sourcing, and purchase-order
generation to ensure cost-effective service delivery of proppant to
the field. Since opening in late 2014, these control towers have
saved the Company $250 million in trucking costs.
In North Texas, the transformation enabled Well Services to
improve tool reliability and reduce maintenance costs. The CRE in
Denton implemented prognostic health management (PHM), using
real-time pump data collected from field locations. During the six
months after implementation, PHM achieved an estimated $6 million
of savings in operation costs.
Cameron Group
(Stated in millions, except
margin percentages)
Three Months Ended Change
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015* Sequential Year-on-year
Revenue $ 1,346 $ 1,341 $ 2,088 - -36%
Pretax operating $ 188 $ 215 $ 354 -13% -47%
income
Pretax operating 14.0 % 16.0 % 17.0 % -207 bps -298 bps
margin
*Fourth-quarter 2015 is presented on a pro
forma basis for comparative purposes.
Cameron Group revenue of $1.3 billion, of which 71% came from
international markets, was flat sequentially. Among the Group's
businesses, OneSubsea reported an 11% sequential increase from
strong project activity and execution in the Europe/CIS/Africa and
Latin America Areas, while Surface Systems posted strong sales in
the Middle East. These increases, however, were offset by a decline
in revenue in Drilling Systems driven by falling backlog and lower
bookings. Valves & Measurement was also lower following the
prior quarter's strong international shipments.
Pretax operating margin of 14% declined 207 bps sequentially due
to the drop in high-margin Drilling Systems project volume.
Cameron Group secured multiple strategic contract awards,
including the industry's longest deepwater subsea multiphase
boosting tieback and contracts to reduce the total cost of
ownership for offshore equipment.
Murphy Exploration & Production Company-USA, a subsidiary of
Murphy Oil Corporation, awarded the Subsea Integration Alliance the
industry's first deepwater integrated subsea engineering,
procurement, construction, installation, and commissioning (EPCIC)
multiphase boosting system contract for the Dalmatian field in the
US Gulf of Mexico. It will be the industry's longest deepwater
subsea multiphase boosting tieback and the first EPCIC project
award for the Subsea Integration Alliance, which was formed in July
2015 between OneSubsea, Schlumberger, and Subsea 7. The contract
scope includes the supply and installation of subsea multiphase
boosting, topside and subsea controls, and a 35-km integrated power
and control umbilical. Offshore installation activities are
scheduled to begin in 2018.
Statoil awarded OneSubsea an engineering, procurement, and
construction contract to supply the subsea production system for
the Utgard gas and condensate field in the North Sea. Contract
scope includes a subsea template manifold system, two subsea
wellheads and vertical monobore subsea trees, production control
system, and associated intervention and workover tooling. Working
in close collaboration with Statoil, OneSubsea will develop a new
subsea wellhead system that is suitable for the fairly shallow
waters of the Utgard field. OneSubsea and Statoil have already
worked together to qualify a vertical monobore subsea tree as a
standardized solution for Statoil's subsea developments. The
vertical trees, which are part of the contract deliverables, will
be assembled and tested at the OneSubsea facility in Horsøy,
Norway.
Transocean awarded Schlumberger two 10-year pressure control
equipment management service contracts valued at more than $350
million. The first contract includes Schlumberger management of
Transocean's Cameron risers in the US Gulf of Mexico as well as
storage, maintenance, inspection, repair, recertification, and
data-driven riser management on the rigs. The second contract
entails the provision of a comprehensive suite of Schlumberger
solutions to maintain and service blowout preventer systems and
other pressure control equipment for nine Transocean
ultra-deepwater and harsh environment drilling rigs. These
contracts will help to reduce total cost of ownership for offshore
equipment and increase uptime associated with pressure control
equipment via integrated technical, operational, and commercial
solutions.
In Saudi Arabia, Valves & Measurement was selected by
multiple engineering, procurement, and construction companies led
by Saudi KAD to provide and install over $40 million of GROVE* ball
valves and LEDEEN* actuators to support key pipeline projects
related to the Master Gas Phase II and Fadhili Gas programs.
Schlumberger in-Kingdom facilities and support for commissioning
and execution activities positioned Cameron to be the ideal partner
for this project.
Financial Tables
Condensed Consolidated
Statement of Income
(Stated in millions,
except
per share amounts)
Fourth Quarter Twelve Months
Periods Ended 2016 2015 2016 2015
December 31,
Revenue $ 7,107 $ 7,744 $ 27,810 $ 35,475
Interest and other income 47 81 200 236
Expenses
Cost of revenue 6,193 6,292 24,110 28,321
Research & engineering 261 276 1,012 1,094
General & administrative 99 132 403 494
Impairments & other(1) 599 2,136 3,172 2,575
Merger & integration(1) 76 - 648 -
Interest 139 91 570 346
Income (loss) $ (213 ) ($1,102 ) $ (1,905 ) $ 2,881
before taxes
Taxes on income (loss)(1) (19 ) (113 ) (278 ) 746
Net income (loss) $ (194 ) ($989 ) $ (1,627 ) $ 2,135
Net income attributable 10 27 60 63
to
noncontrolling interests
Net income (loss) $ (204 ) ($1,016 ) $ (1,687 ) $ 2,072
attributable
to Schlumberger(1)
Diluted earnings $ (0.15 ) ($0.81 ) $ (1.24 ) $ 1.63
(loss) per
share of Schlumberger(1)
Average shares 1,391 1,259 1,357 1,267
outstanding
Average shares 1,391 1,259 1,357 1,275
outstanding
assuming dilution
Depreciation & $ 1,016 $ 963 $ 4,094 $ 4,078
amortization
included in expenses(2)
(1) See section entitled "Charges & Credits" for details.
(2) Includes depreciation of property, plant
and equipment and amortization of
intangible assets, multiclient seismic
data costs and SPM investments.
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet
(Stated in millions)
Dec. 31, Dec. 31,
Assets 2016 2015
Current Assets
Cash and short-term investments $ 9,257 $ 13,034
Receivables 9,387 8,780
Other current assets 5,283 5,098
23,927 26,912
Fixed income investments, held to maturity 238 418
Fixed assets 12,821 13,415
Multiclient seismic data 1,073 1,026
Goodwill 24,990 15,605
Intangible assets 9,855 4,569
Other assets 5,052 6,060
$ 77,956 $ 68,005
Liabilities and Equity
Current Liabilities
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities $ 10,016 $ 7,727
Estimated liability for taxes on income 1,188 1,203
Short-term borrowings and current 3,153 4,557
portion of long-term debt
Dividends payable 702 634
15,059 14,121
Long-term debt 16,463 14,442
Deferred taxes 1,880 1,075
Postretirement benefits 1,495 1,434
Other liabilities 1,530 1,028
36,427 32,100
Equity 41,529 35,905
$ 77,956 $ 68,005
Liquidity
(Stated in
millions)
Components of Dec. 31,2016 Sept. 30,2016 Dec. 31,2015
Liquidity
Cash $9,257 $10,756 $13,034
and short-term
investments
Fixed income 238 354 418
investments,
held to maturity
Short-term (3,153) (3,739) (4,557)
borrowings
and current
portion of
long-term
debt
Long-term debt (16,463) (17,538) (14,442)
Net debt(1) $(10,121) $(10,167) $(5,547)
Details of
changes in
liquidity
follow:
Periods Ended TwelveMonths2016 FourthQuarter2016 TwelveMonths2015
December 31,
Net income $(1,627) $(194) $2,135
(loss)
before
noncontrolling
interests
Impairment 3,236 583 2,218
and other
charges, net
of tax
$1,609 $389 $4,353
Depreciation and 4,094 1,016 4,078
amortization(2)
Pension and 187 48 438
other
postretirement
benefits expense
Stock-based 267 57 326
compensation
expense
Pension and (174) (47) (346)
other
postretirement
benefits funding
Change in 416 639 (478)
working
capital
Other (138) (89) 434
Cash flow from $6,261 $2,013 $8,805
operations(3)
Capital (2,055) (654) (2,410)
expenditures
SPM investments (1,031) (162) (953)
Multiclient (630) (133) (486)
seismic
data capitalized
Free cash 2,545 1,064 4,956
flow(4)
Stock repurchase (778) (116) (2,182)
program
Dividends paid (2,647) (696) (2,419)
Proceeds from 415 71 448
employee
stock plans
(465) 323 803
Business (4,022) (156) (478)
acquisitions
and investments,
net
of cash acquired
plus
debt assumed
Discontinued - - (233)
operations
- settlement
with
US Department
of Justice
Other (87) (121) (252)
(Increase) (4,574) 46 (160)
decrease
in Net Debt
Net (5,547) (10,167) (5,387)
Debt, beginning
of period
Net Debt, end $(10,121) $(10,121) $(5,547)
of period
(1) "Net Debt" represents gross debt less cash, short-term investments
and fixed income investments, held to maturity.
Management believes that Net Debt provides useful information
regarding the level of Schlumberger's indebtedness
by reflecting cash and investments that could be used
to repay debt. Net Debt is a non-GAAP financial
measure that should be considered in addition to, not
as a substitute for, or superior to, total debt.
(2) Includes depreciation of property, plant
and equipment and amortization of
intangible assets, multiclient seismic
data costs and SPM investments.
(3) Includes severance payments of approximately $850 million
and $810 million during the twelve months
ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively,
and $150 million during the fourth quarter
of 2016. Also includes approximately $100 million
of transaction-related payments associated
with the acquisition of Cameron during the
twelve months ended December 31, 2016.
(4) "Free cash flow" represents cash flow from operations
less capital expenditures, SPM investments and
multiclient seismic data costs capitalized. Management
believes that free cash flow is an important
liquidity measure for the Company and that it is useful
to investors and management as a measure of
the ability of our business to generate cash. Once
business needs and obligations are met, this
cash can be used to reinvest in the Company for future
growth or to return to shareholders through
dividend payments or share repurchases. Free cash
flow does not represent the residual cash flow
available for discretionary expenditures. Free cash
flow is a non-GAAP financial measure that should
be considered in addition to, not as substitute
for, or superior to, cash flow from operations.
Charges & Credits
In addition to financial results determined in accordance with
US generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), this Full-Year
and Fourth-Quarter 2016 Earnings Release also includes non-GAAP
financial measures (as defined under the SEC's Regulation G). Net
income, excluding charges & credits, as well as measures
derived from it (including diluted EPS, excluding charges &
credits; net income before noncontrolling interests and charges
& credits; and effective tax rate, excluding charges &
credits) are non-GAAP financial measures. Management believes that
the exclusion of charges & credits from these financial
measures enables it to evaluate more effectively Schlumberger's
operations period over period and to identify operating trends that
could otherwise be masked by the excluded items. These measures are
also used by management as performance measures in determining
certain incentive compensation. The foregoing non-GAAP financial
measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute
for or superior to, other measures of financial performance
prepared in accordance with GAAP. The following is a reconciliation
of these non-GAAP measures to the comparable GAAP measures.
(Stated in millions, except per share amounts)
Fourth Quarter 2016
Pretax Tax Noncont.Interest Net DilutedEPS
Schlumberger $ (213 ) $ (19 ) $ 10 $ (204 ) $ (0.15 )
net loss
(GAAP basis)
Workforce 234 6 - 228
reduction
Facility 165 40 - 125
closure
costs
Costs 98 23 - 75
associated
with exiting
certain
activities
Merger 76 14 - 62
& integration
Currency 63 - - 63
devaluation
loss in Egypt
Contract 39 9 - 30
termination
costs
Schlumberger $ 462 $ 73 $ 10 $ 379 $ 0.27
net income,
excluding
charges &
credits
Third Quarter 2016
Pretax Tax Noncont.Interest Net DilutedEPS
Schlumberger $ 200 $ 10 $ 14 $ 176 $ 0.13
net income
(GAAP basis)
Amortization 149 45 - 104
of purchase
accounting
inventory fair
value
adjustment
Merger-related 46 10 - 36
employee
benefits
and
professional
fees
Other 42 5 - 37
merger
and
integration-related
Schlumberger $ 437 $ 70 $ 14 $ 353 $ 0.25
net income,
excluding
charges &
credits
Fourth Quarter 2015
Pretax Tax Noncont.Interest Net DilutedEPS
Schlumberger $ (1,102 ) $ (113 ) $ 27 $ (1,016 ) $ (0.81 )
net loss
(GAAP basis)
Fixed 776 141 - 635
asset
impairments
Workforce 530 51 - 479
reduction
Inventory 269 27 - 242
write-downs
Impairment of 182 36 - 146
SPM project
in Colombia
Facility 177 37 - 140
closures
Geopolitical 77 - - 77
events
Contract 41 2 - 39
termination
costs
Other 84 7 - 77
Schlumberger $ 1,034 $ 188 $ 27 $ 819 $ 0.65
net income,
excluding
charges &
credits
(Stated in millions, except per share amounts)
Twelve Months 2016
Pretax Tax Noncont.Interest Net DilutedEPS
Schlumberger $ (1,905 ) $ (278 ) $ 60 $ (1,687 ) $ (1.24 )
net loss
(GAAP basis)
Fixed 1,058 177 - 881
asset
impairments
Workforce 880 69 - 811
reduction
Inventory 616 49 - 567
write-downs
Amortization 299 90 - 209
of purchase
accounting
inventory fair
value
adjustment
Other 211 37 - 174
merger
and
integration-related
Multiclient 198 62 - 136
seismic
data
impairment
Facility 165 40 - 125
closure
costs
Merger-related 138 27 111
employee
benefits
and
professional
fees
Costs 98 23 - 75
associated
with exiting
certain
activities
Currency 63 - - 63
devaluation
loss in Egypt
Other 55 - - 55
restructuring
charges
Contract 39 9 - 30
termination
costs
Schlumberger $ 1,915 $ 305 $ 60 $ 1,550 $ 1.14
net income,
excluding
charges &
credits
Twelve Months 2015
Pretax Tax Noncont.Interest Net DilutedEPS
Schlumberger $ 2,881 $ 746 $ 63 $ 2,072 $ 1.63
net income
(GAAP basis)
Workforce 920 107 - 813
reduction
Fixed 776 141 - 635
asset
impairments
Inventory 269 27 - 242
write-downs
Impairment of 182 36 - 146
SPM project
in Colombia
Facility 177 37 - 140
closures
Geopolitical 77 - - 77
events
Currency 49 - - 49
devaluation
loss
in Venezuela
Contract 41 2 - 39
termination
costs
Other 84 7 - 77
Schlumberger $ 5,456 $ 1,103 $ 63 $ 4,290 $ 3.37
net income,
excluding
charges &
credits
Product
Groups
(Stated in
millions)
Three Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2016 Sept. 30, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015
Revenue IncomeBeforeTaxes Revenue IncomeBeforeTaxes Revenue IncomeBeforeTaxes
Reservoir $ 1,699 $ 316 $ 1,689 $ 322 $ 2,193 $ 521
Characterization
Drilling 2,013 234 2,021 218 2,953 494
Production 2,179 132 2,083 98 2,632 302
Cameron 1,346 188 1,341 215 - -
Eliminations (130 ) (60 ) (115 ) (38 ) (34 ) (29 )
& other
Pretax 810 815 1,288
operating
income
Corporate (245 ) (267 ) (179 )
& other
Interest 23 24 8
income(1)
Interest (126 ) (135 ) (83 )
expense(1)
Charges & (675 ) (237 ) (2,136 )
credits
$ 7,107 $ (213 ) $ 7,019 $ 200 $ 7,744 $ (1,102 )
(Stated in millions)
Twelve Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2016 Dec. 31, 2015
Revenue IncomeBeforeTaxes Revenue IncomeBeforeTaxes
Reservoir $ 6,743 $ 1,228 $ 9,738 $ 2,465
Characterization
Drilling 8,561 994 13,563 2,538
Production 8,709 528 12,311 1,570
Cameron 4,211 653 - -
Eliminations & other (414 ) (130 ) (137 ) (63 )
Pretax operating 3,273 6,510
income
Corporate & other (925 ) (768 )
Interest income(1) 84 30
Interest expense(1) (517 ) (316 )
Charges & credits (3,820 ) (2,575 )
$ 27,810 $ (1,905 ) $ 35,475 $ 2,881
(1) Excludes interest included in
the Product Groups results.
Supplemental Information
1) What is the capex guidance for the full year 2017?
Capex (excluding multiclient and SPM investments)
is expected to be $2.2
billion for 2017. Capex for the full year 2016 was $2.1 billion.
2) What was the free cash flow as a percentage
of net income before noncontrolling
interests and charges and credits, for the fourth quarter of 2016?
Free cash flow, which was $1.1 billion and included approximately
$150 million of severance payments, as a percentage of income
from continuing operations before noncontrolling interests and
charges and credits was 274% for the fourth quarter of 2016.
3) What was the free cash flow as a percentage
of net income from continuing operations
before noncontrolling interests and charges
and credits, for the full year 2016?
Free cash flow, which was $2.5 billion and included
approximately $850 million of payments
associated with workforce reductions and $100
million of transaction-related payments
associated with the Cameron acquisition, as a percentage
of net income before noncontrolling
interests and charges and credits was 158% for the full year 2016.
4) What was included in "Interest and other income"
for the fourth quarter of 2016?
"Interest and other income" for the fourth quarter
of 2016 was $47 million. This amount consisted
of earnings of equity method investments of $18
million and interest income of $29 million.
5) How did interest income and interest expense
change during the fourth quarter of 2016?
Interest income of $29 million decreased
$1 million sequentially. Interest
expense of $139 million decreased $10 million sequentially.
6) What is the difference between pretax operating income
and Schlumberger's consolidated income before taxes?
The difference principally consists of corporate items (including
charges and credits) and interest income and
interest expense not allocated to the segments as well
as stock-based compensation expense, amortization
expense associated with certain intangible assets (including
intangible asset amortization expense resulting
from the acquisition of Cameron), certain centrally managed
initiatives, and other nonoperating items.
7) What was the effective tax rate (ETR) for the fourth quarter of 2016?
The ETR for the fourth quarter of 2016 calculated in accordance with
GAAP was 8.8% as compared to 5.1% for the third quarter of 2016. The
ETR for the fourth quarter of 2016, excluding charges and credits,
was 15.8% as compared to 16.0% for the third quarter of 2016.
8) How many shares of common stock were outstanding as of December 31,
2016 and how did this change from the end of the previous quarter?
There were 1.391 billion shares of common stock outstanding
as of December 31, 2016. The following table
shows the change in the number of shares outstanding
from September 30, 2016 to December 31, 2016.
(Stated in millions)
Shares outstanding at September 30, 2016 1,391
Shares sold to optionees, 1
less shares exchanged
Vesting of restricted stock -
Shares issued under employee -
stock purchase plan
Stock repurchase program (1 )
Shares outstanding at December 31, 2016 1,391
9) What was the weighted average number of
shares outstanding during the fourth
quarter of 2016 and third quarter of 2016
and how does this reconcile to
the average number of shares outstanding,
assuming dilution used in the calculation
of diluted earnings per share, excluding charges and credits?
The weighted average number of shares outstanding
during the fourth quarter of
2016 was 1.391 billion and 1.392 billion
during the third quarter of 2016.
The following is a reconciliation of the weighted average shares
outstanding to the average number of shares outstanding,
assuming dilution, used in the calculation of diluted
earnings per share, excluding charges and credits.
(Stated in millions)
Fourth Quarter2016 Third Quarter2016
Weighted average shares 1,391 1,392
outstanding
Assumed exercise 5 4
of stock options
Unvested restricted stock 5 5
Average shares outstanding, 1,401 1,401
assuming dilution
10) What was the amount of WesternGeco multiclient
sales in the fourth quarter of 2016?
Multiclient sales, including transfer fees, were $143 million in the
fourth quarter of 2016 and $144 million in the third quarter of 2016.
11) What was the WesternGeco backlog at the
end of the fourth quarter of 2016?
WesternGeco backlog, which is based on signed contracts
with customers, was $759 million at the end
of the fourth quarter of 2016. It was $845 million
at the end of the third quarter of 2016.
12) What were the orders and backlogs for Cameron Group's
OneSubsea and Drilling Systems businesses?
OneSubsea and Drilling Systems orders and backlogs were as follows:
(Stated in millions)
Orders Fourth Quarter2016 Third Quarter2016
OneSubsea $ 523 $ 434
Drilling Systems $ 132 $ 179
Backlog(at the end of period)
OneSubsea $ 2,526 $ 2,527
Drilling Systems $ 607 $ 865
13) What do the various charges Schlumberger recorded
during the fourth quarter of 2016 relate to?
We are making further adjustments to our global support structure
and facilities footprint to align our resources
to the shape of the recovery. This has led us to
record $536 million in restructuring charges.
We have also recorded $139 million of pretax charges
relating to the Cameron acquisition and a currency
devaluation loss in Egypt. These $675 million of
pretax charges consist of the following:
-- $234 million of workforce reduction costs
-- $165 million of facility closure costs
-- $98 million of costs associated with exiting certain activities
-- $76 million of merger and integration costs
relating to the Cameron acquisition
-- $63 million of currency devaluation loss in Egypt
-- $39 million of contract termination costs
About Schlumberger
Schlumberger is the world's leading provider of technology for
reservoir characterization, drilling, production, and processing to
the oil and gas industry. Working in more than 85 countries and
employing approximately 100,000 people who represent over 140
nationalities, Schlumberger supplies the industry's most
comprehensive range of products and services, from exploration
through production, and integrated pore-to-pipeline solutions that
optimize hydrocarbon recovery to deliver reservoir performance.
Schlumberger Limited has principal offices in Paris, Houston,
London and The Hague, and reported revenues of $27.81 billion in
2016. For more information, visit www.slb.com.
*Mark of Schlumberger or of Schlumberger companies
Notes
Schlumberger will hold a conference call to discuss the earnings
press release and business outlook on Friday, January 20, 2017. The
call is scheduled to begin at 7:30 a.m. (US Central Time), 8:30
a.m. (Eastern Time), 2:30 p.m. (Paris time). To access the call,
which is open to the public, please contact the conference call
operator at +1 (800) 288-8967 within North America, or +1 (612)
333-4911 outside North America, approximately 10 minutes prior to
the call's scheduled start time. Ask for the "Schlumberger Earnings
Conference Call." At the conclusion of the conference call an audio
replay will be available until February 20, 2017 by dialing +1
(800) 475-6701 within North America, or +1 (320) 365-3844 outside
North America, and providing the access code 405410.
The conference call will be webcast simultaneously at
www.slb.com/irwebcast on a listen-only basis. Please log in 15
minutes ahead of time to test your browser and register for the
call. A replay of the webcast will also be available at the same
web site until March 31, 2017.
This full-year and fourth-quarter 2016 earnings release, as well
as other statements we make, contain "forward-looking statements"
within the meaning of the federal securities laws, which include
any statements that are not historical facts, such as our forecasts
or expectations regarding business outlook; growth for Schlumberger
as a whole and for each of its segments (and for specified products
or geographic areas within each segment); oil and natural gas
demand and production growth; oil and natural gas prices;
improvements in operating procedures and technology, including our
transformation program; capital expenditures by Schlumberger and
the oil and gas industry; the business strategies of Schlumberger's
customers; the anticipated benefits of the Cameron transaction; the
success of Schlumberger's joint ventures and alliances; future
global economic conditions; and future results of operations. These
statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including, but
not limited to, global economic conditions; changes in exploration
and production spending by Schlumberger's customers and changes in
the level of oil and natural gas exploration and development;
general economic, political and business conditions in key regions
of the world; foreign currency risk; pricing pressure; weather and
seasonal factors; operational modifications, delays or
cancellations; production declines; changes in government
regulations and regulatory requirements, including those related to
offshore oil and gas exploration, radioactive sources, explosives,
chemicals, hydraulic fracturing services and climate-related
initiatives; the inability of technology to meet new challenges in
exploration; the inability to integrate the Cameron business and to
realize expected synergies; the inability to retain key employees;
and other risks and uncertainties detailed in this full-year and
fourth-quarter 2016 earnings release and Supplemental Information
and our most recent Forms 10-K, 10-Q, and 8-K filed with or
furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission. If one or more
of these or other risks or uncertainties materialize (or the
consequences of any such development changes), or should our
underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual outcomes may vary
materially from those reflected in our forward-looking statements.
Schlumberger disclaims any intention or obligation to update
publicly or revise such statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise.
Schlumberger LimitedSimon Farrant - Schlumberger Limited, Vice
President of Investor RelationsJoy V. Domingo - Schlumberger
Limited, Manager of Investor RelationsOffice +1 (713)
375-3535investor-relations@slb.com
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