Shell posts $9.5 billion profit, plans to boost dividend
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[October 27, 2022] By
Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) - Shell on Thursday posted
a third-quarter profit of $9.45 billion, easing from the previous
quarter's record high due to weaker refining and gas trading, as it
announced plans to sharply boost its dividend by year end when its CEO
departs.
Shell also extended its share repurchasing programme, announcing plans
to buy $4 billion of stock over the next three months after completing
$6 billion in the previous quarter.
The company said it intends to increase its dividend by 15% in the
fourth quarter, when Chief Executive Officer Ben van Beurden will step
down after nine years at the helm. The dividend will be paid in March.
Shell shares were up 2.5% after trading opened in London.
Van Beurden will be succeeded by Wael Sawan, the current head of Shell's
natural gas and low-carbon division.
With a profit of $30.5 billion so far this year, Shell is well on track
to exceed its record annual profit in 2008 of $31 billion.
The strong earnings were likely to intensify calls in Britain and the
European Union to impose further windfall taxes on energy companies as
governments struggle with soaring gas and power bills.
Shell's shares gained over 40% so far this year, lifted by soaring oil
and gas prices in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February
and amid tightening global oil and gas supplies.
Rival TotalEnergies posted a record profit in the third quarter.
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A view shows a board with the logo of
Shell at the company's fuel station in Saint Petersburg, Russia May
6, 2022. REUTERS/Anton Vaganov/File Photo
LNG WOES
The quarterly adjusted earnings of $9.45 billion, which slightly
exceeded forecasts, were hit by a sharp 38% quarterly drop in the
gas and renewables division, Shell's largest.
Earnings for the second quarter were a record $11.5 billion.
The world's largest trader of liquefied natural gas (LNG), produced
5% less LNG in the period compared with last year at 7.2 million
tonnes mainly due to ongoing strikes at its Australian Prelude
facility.
Its gas trading business was hit this quarter by "supply
constraints, coupled with substantial differences between paper and
physical realisations in a volatile and dislocated market."
Earnings from the refining, chemicals and oil trading division also
dropped sharply by 62% in the quarter due to weaker refining
margins.
Shell said it would stick to its plans to spend $23-$27 billion this
year.
Shell's cashflow in the quarter dropped sharply to $12.5 billion
from $18.6 billion in the previous quarter due to a large working
capital outflow of $4.2 billion as a result of changes in the value
of European gas inventories.
Shell's net debt rose by around $2 billion to $46.4 billion due to
lower cashflow from operations and to pay for a recent acquisition.
Its debt-to-capital ratio, known as gearing, also rose above 20%.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla; editing by Jason Neely
& Simon Cameron-Moore)
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