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Shell reported adjusted earnings of $6.3bn for the second quarter, beating analyst consensus.
The company initiated a $3.5bn share buyback program, to be completed by the third quarter results.
Shell’s focus on value under CEO Wael Sawan is evident in the decision to pause construction of its Rotterdam biofuels facility.
Shell kicked off a $3.5bn (£2.74bn) share buyback program today as it posted better-than-expected numbers for the second quarter despite a previously announced $2bn (£1.6bn) impairment and a slide in revenue.
The London-listed oil major reported adjusted earnings of $6.3bn (£4.91bn) for the three months to June 30, beating analyst consensus of $5.9bn (£4.6bn).
Revenue was down quarter-on-quarter, falling 19 percent from $7.7bn in the first quarter, as lower liquified natural gas trading and refining margins and a weaker oil price weighed on the firm’s earnings.
The dent to revenue at the London-listed oil major was partially offset by better marketing margins and volumes, it said.
The earnings beat was enough for the company to trigger a $3.5bn share buyback program, which is expected to be completed by the third quarter results, mirroring the round announced at the firm’s first-quarter results announced in April.
The results came despite a $2bn (£1.6bn) impairment in its biofuels and refining divisions. In early July, the oil major announced that its decision to temporarily pause construction at a biofuels facility in Rotterdam and divest from a Singapore refining plant would, combined with slower trading in its gash division, would cost the firm an estimated $2bn.
Shell’s results follow rival petrochemical giant BP, whose first-half performance beat expectations despite disclosing a similarly large refining-related writedown of its own alongside its production report in July.
The decision to pause construction on its Rotterdam biofuels facility is further evidence of the intense focus on the value that chief executive Wael Sawan, who has now been at the helm for over a year, has brought to the business.
In so doing the firm has rowed back from several of its climate commitments and pledges, which triggered the resignation of several high-profile executives in its renewables division.
“Shell reported good Q2 results,” said Tineke Frikkee, head of UK equity research at investment management shop Waverton. “Sales missed by 2.5% due to lower volumes sold in oil & gas, but profitability improvements and better plant utilization meant that profit beat by 6% and earnings per share by 2%…
“[By investing $4.7bn into the business, Shell showed] a solid demonstration of its commitment to improve operational performance.”
Shares in Shell were up 1.3 percent in early morning trading.
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The post Shell Initiates £2 Billion Share Buyback Program appeared first on Energy News Beat.
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