BP boosts dividend after profit hits 14-year high
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[August 02, 2022] By
Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) - BP's second quarter
profit soared to $8.45 billion, its highest in 14 years, as strong
refining margins and trading prompted it to boost its dividend and
spending on new oil and gas production.
The strong performance caps a blowout quarter for the top Western oil
and gas companies on the back of soaring energy prices that have
increased pressure on governments to impose new taxes on the sector to
help consumers.
"The company is running well and it continues to strengthen. We have
real strategic momentum," Chief Executive Officer Bernard Looney told
Reuters.
BP shares were up 3.5% by 0925 GMT, their highest since June, strongly
outperforming the broader European energy index which was up 0.5%.
Looney, who took office in 2020 with a vow to rapidly shift BP away from
fossil fuels to renewables, said that the company will increase its
spending on new oil and gas by $500 million in response to the global
supply crunch.
"We will direct more investment towards hydrocarbons to help with energy
security in the near term," Looney said. "We'll probably direct about a
half a billion dollars for hydrocarbons."
BP plans to maintain its overall capital expenditure this year in a
range of $14 billion to $15 billion.
BP increased its dividend by 10% to 6.006 cents per share, more than its
previous guidance of a 4% annual increase. It halved its dividend to
5.25 cents in July 2020 for the first time in a decade in the wake of
the pandemic.
The company also increased its share repurchases plan for the current
quarter to $3.5 billion after it bought $4.1 billion in the first half
of the year.
"The fact it produced its highest quarterly profit in 14 years, even
though oil prices were higher during that period than they are now,
suggests BP is a more efficient machine than it was previously," AJ Bell
investment director Russ Mould said.
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Logo of British Petrol BP is seen e at petrol station in Pienkow,
Poland, June 8, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel
The company said it expected crude oil and gas prices as well as refining
margins to remain "elevated" in the third quarter and said it would stick to its
target of using 60% of its surplus cash on share buybacks.
The surge in revenue also allowed BP to sharply reduce its debt to $22.8 billion
from $27.5 billion at the end of March.
BIG OIL BONANZA
BP brings the second quarter profit tally for the top Western oil and gas
companies to $59 billion after rivals including Exxon Mobil and Shell reported
record earnings last week.
Its underlying replacement cost profit, its definition of net earnings, reached
$8.45 billion in the second quarter, the highest since 2008 and far exceeding
analysts' expectations of $6.8 billion.
That was up from $6.25 billion in the first quarter and $2.8 billion a year
earlier.
The strong performance was driven by strong refining margins, "exceptional" oil
trading performance as well as higher fuel prices, although gas trading was
weaker, BP said.
An outage at a major U.S. Gulf Coast liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant, also
weighed on profits.
The Freeport LNG plant supplies BP with 4 million tonnes per year of LNG, out of
a total portfolio of 18 million tonnes.
The company has been able to redirect cargoes to customers to cover for the lost
supply but at an elevated cost that weighed on profits, Chief Financial Officer
Murray Auchincloss told Reuters.
The company has allocated money to cover for the extra costs of LNG supply as a
result of the Freeport outage, he said.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla; editing by Jason Neely)
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