Exxon 4Q Profit Tops Estimate, Share Buyback Slashed In Half

Feb 2 (Reuters) - Exxon Mobil Corp said on Monday its quarterly profit fell 21 percent as weak oil prices took a toll, but results topped Wall Street expectations due to a tax adjustment and higher earnings from its chemicals business.
Shares of Exxon rose 1.2 percent to $88.46 in mid-day New York Stock Exchange trading.
Global oil markets are oversupplied at a time when demand is waning, sending crude prices tumbling by more than half since June. Investors are closely watching oil companies' responses to the collapse, which has included job cuts and reduced capital expenditure budgets.
Mindful of lower oil prices, Exxon said it will slash its share buyback program in the first quarter by more than half to $1 billion. In the fourth quarter, Exxon spent $3 billion on share repurchases. Rival Chevron Corp said on Friday it suspended its share buyback program for the year.
Exxon, which plans to release its 2015 capital expenditure plan on March 4, spent $38.5 billion in 2014, down $4 billion from 2013. Spending for the oil major peaked at $42.5 billion in 2013, and the company has said it expects annual budgets below $37 billion over the next several years.
The company's investment plan will change, but not very much because Exxon bases its strategy on long-term planning, Jeff Woodbury, Exxon's vice president of investor relations, said on a conference call.
"We'll keep a close eye on our cash flow, maintain our investment discipline and of course our commitment to the growing dividend," said Woodbury. Last week, Exxon declared a quarterly dividend of 69 per share, up nearly 10 percent from the year-ago quarter. (BreakingViews-Shareholders give Exxon the benefit of the doubt, click )
In stark contrast to other companies drilling in North American shale deposits, Exxon said it increased the number of rigs drilling in its oil basins that includes the Bakken and Permian to 44 in the fourth quarter from 39 in the third period.
Profit in the fourth quarter fell to $6.57 billion, or $1.56 per share, from $8.35 billion, or $1.91 per share, in the same quarter a year earlier.
Analysts, on average, expected a profit of $1.34 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Earnings were helped by about $1 billion in items that included deferrals on income tax and a favorable arbitration ruling for expropriated assets in Venezuela, Exxon said.
"I think the quality of the earnings beat is questionable," said Brian Youngberg, an oil analyst at Edward Jones in St. Louis. "Some net tax effects and Venezuela really drove the beat. They remain growth challenged."
Oil and natural gas production fell 3.8 percent, according to Irving, Texas-based Exxon.
Profit in the company's chemicals unit rose 74 percent to $1.23 billion, while profit in its exploration and production business fell by $1.3 billion to $5.5 billion.
(Reporting by Anna Driver in Houston; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
- Weatherford CEO's Rebound Plan Relies On Getting Smaller
- Iran Says Oil Market Is Too Tight For US Zero Exports Target
- China's Squeezed 'Teapots' Eye Petchem Path To Riches
- Baker Hughes: US Drillers Add Oil Rigs For Second Week In Three
- Venezuela Hands China More Oil Presence, But No Mention Of New Funds
- Bankrupt Sri Lanka Takes Russia Oil
- FERC Approves Gas Pipeline Projects To Increase U.S. Exports
- A Guide to the Week's Oil and Gas Market Hits and Misses
- Windfall Tax Branded a Backward Step
- U.S. Announces First Ever Offshore Wind Sale On Pacific Coast
- BSEE Evaluates Lobo Operating's Fire Boom System
- Oil And Gas Exploration In 2021 Resilient Regardless Of Pandemic
- Crestwood Makes $1.19B Worth Of Asset Transactions
- DOI Invests $33MM Putting People to Work in Orphaned Well Program
- Chevron Investors Go For Energy Transition In Near-Unanimous Vote
- Oil Inventories Down to Dangerously Low Point
- USA Fuelmakers Shifting Into Higher Gear
- ExxonMobil Selling Shale Assets for $750MM
- Bankrupt Sri Lanka Takes Russia Oil
- Shots Fired During Tanker Loading
- NPD Grants Slew of Drilling Permits
- World's Oil Growth Engine Is About to Slow
- Saudi Arabia Says It Has Done All It Can for the Oil Market
- FID For $13.2B Louisiana LNG Project
- Halliburton, Baker Hughes and More Write to UK Government
- Russian Oil Producers Start Using Tankers the World Did Not Want
- ADNOC Announces 650MM Barrel Oil Find
- Finland Loses Main Gas Supply
- This Is Where the Oil Price Would Be Without the War
- Ban on Excessive Gasoline Prices Heading for Vote
- Oil Inventories Down to Dangerously Low Point
- Top Headlines: Be Prepared to Pay More at the Pump from June
- USA Fuelmakers Shifting Into Higher Gear
- Gas Prices Could Rocket in the Near Term
- ExxonMobil Selling Shale Assets for $750MM