Business Day

BP posts earnings that beat forecasts

• Giant’s fourth-quarter earnings of $3bn come as a relief to the new CE0

- Ron Bousso

BP posted forecast-beating earnings of $3bn in the fourth quarter on Tuesday while boosting share repurchase­s and vowing to make pragmatic investment­s, as its recently appointed CEO sought to allay investor concern over its energy transition strategy.

The company’s shares were more than 5% higher by 9.07am GMT (11.07am) after the unexpected accelerati­on of the buyback programme.

The quarterly results, lifted by strong gas trading, took the energy giant’s 2023 profit to $13.8bn, though it was half that of a year earlier as oil and gas prices cooled and refining profit margins weakened.

The earnings come as a relief to CEO Murray Auchinclos­s after the company substantia­lly missed forecasts in the previous two quarters.

Auchinclos­s became permanent CEO in January after being named interim CEO on September 12 when Bernard Looney abruptly stepped down for failing to fully disclose details of past personal relationsh­ips with colleagues.

Auchinclos­s said BP remains committed to reducing oil and gas output and sharply growing its renewables and low-carbon businesses by the end of the decade.

“As we drive towards 2025 we are going to focus on simplifyin­g the business,” he said. We will pragmatica­lly adapt to what’s happening with demand in society,” he said, adding that BP will go for the “highest return and highest-value projects”.

BP’s shares have underperfo­rmed rivals in recent months amid investor concerns over its strategy and the leadership upheaval.

The company said it is committed to repurchasi­ng $3.5bn of shares in the first half of 2024 and expects to purchase $14bn in 2024-25.

“BP delivers what investors were asking for: higher distributi­ons and more visibility,” Jefferies analyst Giacomo Romeo said in a note.

STRONG TRADING

Rivals ExxonMobil, Chevron and Shell last week beat profit expectatio­ns on a mix of strong trading results and higher oil and gas production though refining margins weighed on the sector amid sluggish global economic activity.

BP’s fourth-quarter underlying replacemen­t cost profit, the company’s definition of net income, reached $2.99bn, exceeding forecasts of $2.77bn in a company-provided survey of analysts.

That compared with a $3.3bn profit in the third quarter and $4.8bn a year earlier.

BP said the results reflect strong gas trading and higher oil and gas prices, which were offset by “significan­tly lower” refining margins, weak oil trading and exploratio­n impairment­s.

It maintained its dividend at 7.27c per share and increased the rate of its share buybacks to $1.75bn over the next three months from $1.5bn in the previous three.

Capital expenditur­e in 2023 was unchanged from a year earlier at $16.3bn, and is expected to dip to $16bn this year and next.

BP generated more than $32bn of cash last year, compared with $41bn in 2022. It reduced net debt to $20.9bn by year-end, the lowest in a decade, from $21.4bn 12 months earlier.

BP’S SHARES HAVE UNDERPERFO­RMED RIVALS IN RECENT MONTHS AMID INVESTOR CONCERNS OVER STRATEGY AND LEADERSHIP

 ?? /Reuters ?? Focused: BP CEO Murray Auchinclos­s says the energy giant remains committed to reducing oil and gas output and sharply growing its renewables and low-carbon businesses.
/Reuters Focused: BP CEO Murray Auchinclos­s says the energy giant remains committed to reducing oil and gas output and sharply growing its renewables and low-carbon businesses.

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