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		Exxon signals operating profits could double over the first quarter
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		 [July 02, 2022]  
		By Sabrina Valle 
 HOUSTON (Reuters) -Exxon Mobil Corp on 
		Friday signaled that skyrocketing margins from fuel and crude sales 
		could generate a record quarterly profit, according to a securities 
		filing.
 
 Energy prices have shot up this year with oil selling for more than $105 
		per barrel and gasoline at about $5 per gallon in the United States. The 
		enormous earnings are likely to ignite new calls for windfall profit 
		taxes.
 
 The largest U.S. oil producer projected a sequential increase of about 
		$7.4 billion in operating profits compared with the first quarter. In 
		the first quarter, Exxon posted an $8.8 billion profit, excluding a 
		Russia writedown.
 
 The filing indicates a potential profit of more than $16 billion for the 
		second quarter. The company's peak quarterly profit was $15.9 billion in 
		2012.
 
 The filing showed Exxon expects higher oil and gas prices will add about 
		$2.9 billion to results. Margins from selling gasoline and diesel will 
		add another $4.5 billion to operating profits.
 
 "High energy prices are largely a result of underinvestment by many in 
		the energy industry over the last several years and especially during 
		the pandemic," Exxon said in a statement on the profit gains.
 
 
		
		 
		Analysts tracked by IBES Refinitiv forecast a per share profit of $2.99, 
		up from $1.10 in the same quarter a year ago. Official results for the 
		period will be released on July 29, according to a summary of factors 
		influencing the period disclosed late Friday.
 
 Exxon's profits led U.S. President Joe Biden last month to say the 
		company and other oil majors were capitalizing on a global oil supply 
		shortage to fatten profits. Exxon, he said, was making "more money than 
		God" after posting its biggest quarterly profit in seven years.
 
 The company reacted to the president's comments saying it is investing 
		more than any other producer in the United States to expand oil and 
		natural gas production, including in the Permian, the country's largest 
		unconventional basin.
 
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			People pump gas at an Exxon gas station in Brooklyn, New York City, 
			U.S., November 23, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly 
            
			
			 
U.S. Representative Ro Khanna on Friday said Exxon's record-breaking profits 
reinforce his call for Congress to pass a windfall tax on Big Oil.
 "Big Oil companies should be providing relief to their customers, not pouring 
billions into stock buybacks to enrich their investors," he said in a statement.
 
 Exxon's shares closed up 2.2% at $87.55 on Friday.
 
 Exxon, which lost more than $22 billion in 2020, has been using the extra cash 
from higher energy prices sales to pay debt and raise distributions to 
shareholders. It plans to buy back up to $30 billion of its shares through 2023.
 
 Despite losses during the pandemic, Exxon continued to invest in additional 
production and expects to increase output in the Permian by 25% in 2022, the 
company's spokesperson said.
 
 The second-quarter results will be the first quarterly earnings report since 
Exxon decided to report results by four business units, giving a more detailed 
breakout of its petrochemical operations. The snapshot showed that margins in 
its chemical and specialty products units were flat in the second quarter 
compared with the first.
 
 The company estimated the impact of exiting Russia would cut oil and gas profits 
by about $150 million compared with the first quarter. Exxon wrote down $3.4 
billion in Russia assets earlier this year.
 
 Exxon also signaled a contribution of about $300 million from asset sales in the 
quarter.
 
 (Reporting by Sabrina ValleEditing by Alistair Bell and Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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