Arab News

Shell cuts spending as oil slump hits profits

-

LONDON: Energy giant Royal Dutch Shell has announced an eight-percent drop in annual net profits owing to a slump in global oil prices and said it would accelerate spending cuts.

Profit after tax dropped to $15.05 billion (13.3 billion euros) in 2014 compared with the Anglo-Dutch company's performanc­e one year earlier, slipping on plunging earnings in the fourth quarter as the cost of crude tumbled.

"Compared with the fourth quarter 2013, earnings... were impacted by the significan­t decline in (the price of) oil," Shell said in a statement.

Fourth-quarter net profit plunged 57 percent to $773 million compared with the final three months of 2013.

Annual profit excluding exceptiona­l items and changes to the value of its oil inventorie­s rose 16 percent to $22.5 billion.

Shell said it would slash spending by more than $15.0 billion over the next three years, mirroring similar moves by rivals in the energy sector which are also reacting to slumping oil prices by cutting costs.

"The agenda we set out in early 2014 to balance growth and returns has positioned us well for the current oil market downturn," Shell CEO Ben van Beurden said.

"We are taking a prudent approach here and we must be careful not to over-react to the recent fall in oil prices. Shell is taking structured decisions to balance growth and returns," he added in the results statement.

Shell noted that lower prices created opportunit­ies for the group to cut costs.

It added that deferring spending in many areas and driving costs down in the supply chain "should result in reduction of potential capital investment for 2015- 17 of over $15 billion".

Earlier this month, Royal Dutch Shell and Qatar Petroleum scrapped plans for a petrochemi­cals project, worth an estimated $6.5 billion.

But it is still investing in expensive projects and on Wednesday signed an agreement with the Iraqi government potentiall­y worth $11 billion to build a large petrochemi­cals plant in the country's south.

Oil futures have lost more than half their value since June when crude was trading at more than $100 a barrel, amid a supply glut that has been boosted largely by robust US shale oil production and weak global demand.

The falls accelerate­d in November after the OPEC oil cartel insisted that it would maintain output levels despite already plunging prices. The 12-nation group pumps about 30 percent of global crude.

Shares in Shell slid Thursday, losing more than four percent in value and topping the loser's board on London's benchmark FTSE 100 index, which was down 0.51 percent at 6,790.97 points in late morning deals. "Shares in Royal Dutch Shell are trading lower after the oil titan posted fourth-quarter adjusted profits that missed analysts' already low estimates," said David Madden, market analyst at traders IG.

"The energy giant has $15 billion worth of spending cuts in the pipeline as the slump in oil price has curtailed its expansion.

"To keep investors sweet the oil company announced a healthy dividend, but that wasn't enough to win back traders' confidence as the enormous cut to capital expenditur­e signals cautious times ahead."

 ??  ?? Khaled Al-Aboodi, CEO and general manager of ICD, second from left, with Raja Al-Marzouki, Adviser/IMF for Saudi Arabia, Middle East and Central Asia Dept. left, and Tim Callen, IMF’s mission chief for Saudi Arabia, Middle East and Central Asia Dept,...
Khaled Al-Aboodi, CEO and general manager of ICD, second from left, with Raja Al-Marzouki, Adviser/IMF for Saudi Arabia, Middle East and Central Asia Dept. left, and Tim Callen, IMF’s mission chief for Saudi Arabia, Middle East and Central Asia Dept,...
 ??  ?? Ben van Beurden, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell, addresses a press conference in central London. (AFP)
Ben van Beurden, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell, addresses a press conference in central London. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia