Exxon signals fourth quarter weakness in chemicals and
refining, offset by asset sale
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[January 04, 2020] By
Jennifer Hiller
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Exxon Mobil Corp's <XOM.N>
fourth quarter operating results will decline from a year ago due to
weakness in chemicals and refining, according to a regulatory filing and
analyst comments on Friday.
Some analysts slashed earnings projections to about 50 cents per share,
down from the average earlier estimate of 71 cents, according to
Refinitiv IBES. The estimates exclude gains from asset sales.
Exxon on Friday provided its expectations for fourth-quarter results
compared with the prior quarter. It will officially report results for
the latest quarter on Jan. 31.
The update "is like Groundhog's day - once again chemicals and
downstream weakness will drag down overall earnings," said Jennifer
Rowland, analyst at Edward Jones.
Exxon in the filing projected a loss in chemicals and a sharply lower
operating profit in refining, two of its three major businesses. The
company earned about $1 billion per quarter in chemicals as recently as
2017.
Operating profit in its largest business, oil and gas production, could
be $2.3 billion based on the midpoint of its estimate, up from the third
quarter but down from a year ago, according to the filing.
Offsetting the weak results, Exxon will report a gain of as much as $3.6
billion from the sale of its Norwegian oil and gas production, part of a
plan to divest about $15 billion in assets by 2021.
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Logos of ExxonMobil are seen in its booth at Gastech, the world's
biggest expo for the gas industry, in Chiba, Japan April 4, 2017.
REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File Photo
"The asset sale proceeds will help cover the dividend, but that's not a
sustainable strategy," Rowland said.
Exxon did not disclose any asset impairments or write downs in its filing. Since
October, rivals Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L>, Chevron <CVX.N>, BP <BP.L>, Equinor
<ENQR.OS> and Spain's Repsol <REP.MC> all wrote down a total more than $20
billion, primarily in U.S. shale gas assets due to lower long-term gas prices.
Cowen & Co cut its quarterly earnings estimate for Exxon to 49 cents per share
from 71 cents. Simmons Energy lowered its estimate to 52 cents from 78 cents.
Exxon's refining and chemicals businesses "remain a material headwind to cash
flow" as there is no sign it will slow spending on new investments, Simmons
Energy said in a note to clients.
(Reporting by Jennifer Hiller in Houston and Shariq Khan in Bengaluru; Editing
by Maju Samuel and Bill Berkrot)
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