BP raises dividend as $2.8bn quarterly profit beats forecasts

The energy company has also extended its share repurchasing programme

Picture: REUTERS/KACPER PEMPEL
Picture: REUTERS/KACPER PEMPEL

London — BP increased its dividend and extended its share repurchasing programme on Tuesday as it reported a forecast beating second-quarter profit of nearly $2.8bn, with weak refining offset by stronger oil prices and retail.

The result, which topped analysts’ estimates by 9%, is likely to ease pressure on CEO Murray Auchincloss after BP fell short of profit expectations in the previous two quarters.

The 53-year-old Canadian, who took office in January, has vowed to revamp BP’s operations and focus on the most profitable ones, mostly in oil and gas.

In a sign of change from his predecessor Bernard Looney’s strategy to grow renewables and reduce fossil fuel output, BP said it had given a green light to the development of the Kaskida oilfield in the US Gulf of Mexico, a highly complex project in deep geological formations.

The field is expected to start production in 2029 and have a capacity of 80,000 barrels of oil per day (bpd).

The company also announced it would go ahead with the development of a low-carbon hydrogen project at its Castellon refinery in Spain.

BP shares were up 1.2% at 10.02am GMT, compared with a flat performance of the broader European energy index.

The stock has underperformed rivals this year, remaining largely flat, amid investor concern over the British company’s energy transition strategy and doubts it will meet its 2025 earnings targets.

BP is working to exceed its target to reduce annual costs by $2bn by the end of 2026, Auchincloss said in an analyst presentation posted online. Reuters reported in June that the company had imposed a hiring freeze and suspended investments in new offshore wind projects.

“We are driving focus across the business and reducing costs, all while building momentum in our drive to 2025,” Auchincloss said in a statement.

Weak refining

BP lifted its dividend by 10% to 8c per share from 7.27c, in line with analysts’ expectations, based on LSEG data.

It also maintained the rate of its share buyback programme at $1.75bn over the next three months and said it remains committed to buying a total of $14bn shares this year and next.

Underlying replacement cost profit, the company’s definition of net income, reached $2.76bn in the three months to June, exceeding a forecast of $2.54bn in a company-provided survey of analysts.

That compared with a $2.7bn profit in the previous quarter and $2.6bn a year earlier.

Weaker refining margins due to lower diesel demand and a higher level of refinery maintenance weighed on the result, but were offset by higher oil and gas prices in the quarter and a lower than expected tax rate. BP’s oil trading contribution was weak after a strong showing in the previous quarter, it said.

Auchincloss told Reuters that global demand for gasoline and diesel was weak but that inventories were expected to come down during the summer driving season, supporting refining margins.

Last week, France’s TotalEnergies reported a 6% drop in second quarter profits, also hurt by a tumble in European refining margins.

BP will maintain capital expenditure at $16bn per year in 2024 and 2025.

BP’s net debt decreased by $1.4bn in the quarter to $22.6bn and its debt-to-equity ratio, known as gearing, fell to 21.6% from 22% at the end of March.

Reuters

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