'Cash Machine' BP Sees Profit Surge

BP CEO Bernard Looney (File Photo: BP - Cropped)
BP CEO Bernard Looney (File Photo: BP - Cropped)

BP added more than a billion dollars to its share buyback program on Tuesday as it likened itself to a "cash machine" benefiting from higher oil and gas prices and a strong trading performance in the third quarter.

Natural gas and power prices around the world surged this autumn as tight gas supplies collided with strong demand in economies recovering from the pandemic.

BP said it expected natural gas prices to remain strong in the coming months of peak winter demand.

The company "is a cash machine at these sort of (oil and gas) prices and the business is running very well," Chief Executive Officer Bernard Looney told Reuters.

Underlying replacement cost profit, the company's definition of net earnings, reached $3.32 billion in the third quarter, exceeding analysts' expectations for $3.06 billion.

That compares with $2.8 billion in profit in the second quarter and $86 million a year earlier, when energy demand and prices collapsed due to the coronavirus epidemic.

The results were boosted by "very strong trading," which helped BP weather large fluctuations in gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) prices throughout the quarter.

Reuters reported last month that BP's trading arm made at least $500 million in the quarter.

"It's not only a trading story. We have had production growth, we have stronger reliability and availability in our businesses," Looney said.

Although the headline profit reflects a strong business, BP reported a loss attributable to shareholders of $2.54 billion due to accounting effects and hedges as a result of fluctuations in LNG prices, which are nevertheless expected to unwind in the coming quarter.

BP shares were down 2% by 0845 GMT, compared with a 0.9% decline in the broader European energy index.

BUYBACKS

The company said it would repurchase a further $1.25 billion of its shares by early 2022, after buying $900 million during the third quarter. BP plans to maintain buybacks at a rate of around $1 billion per quarter at oil prices of $60 a barrel.

BP's net debt fell further to $32 billion from $32.7 billion in the second quarter.

The long-term outlook for fossil fuel demand, however, remains uncertain as world leaders gather this week in Glasgow, Scotland, for a U.N. conference critical to averting the most disastrous effects of climate change.

BP plans to sharply reduce its carbon emissions in the coming decades by increasing its renewable power capacity 20-fold by 2030, while reducing its oil output by 40% and diverting more funds to low-carbon investments.

"The company can talk about 'Performing while Transforming' all it likes but it needs to prove to shareholders and the markets as a whole that it can transition to renewables in a way that doesn't hammer its margins, and the jury is likely to remain out on that," Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK, said in a note.

Looney told Reuters the company had not faced calls from investors to split into separate low-carbon and oil and gas divisions, after an activist fund called for rival Royal Dutch Shell to break up its business last week.

(Reporting by Ron Bousso Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Mark Potter)

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