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BP Returns to Profitability and Plans to Raise Its Dividend | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
LONDON — The oil giant BP returned to profitability with a better-than-expected third-quarter profit, prompting it to raise its dividend. | |
The company posted earnings of $5.4 billion for the three months ending on Sept. 30. That compared with a loss of $1.4 billion loss in the previous quarter, when the company took write-downs on the value of its American refineries and other assets. It was also a slight improvement on the $5 billion BP earned in the third quarter last year. | |
BP said it was raising its quarterly dividend by more than 12 percent, to 9 pence (14.4 cents) a share. The company’s share price rose more than 3.4 percent in trading in London. | |
“Over all, this is a much better result than the poor second quarter,” said Stuart Joyner, an analyst at Investec in London. | |
Two years after taking over as chief executive after the Gulf of Mexico disaster, Robert Dudley appears to be putting his stamp on the company. He has said from the beginning that he wanted to use the oil spill as an opportunity to streamline BP into more of a high-risk, high-reward exploration and production company. | |
For instance, BP said that during the three-month period it had reached deals to sell $11 billion in assets, bringing its total asset sales to $35 billion since the start of 2010. That is close to BP’s goal of $38 billion by the end of 2013. The most recent was a $2.5 billion deal to sell the Texas City, Tex., refinery, where an explosion killed 15 people in 2005, to Marathon Petroleum for $2.5 billion. | |
Not included in those calculations is Mr. Dudley’s boldest move: the recent agreement to sell BP’s 50 percent share of its Russian affiliate TNK-BP. In that complex transaction, BP is to receive $12.3 billion in cash and a 19.75 percent stake in Rosneft, the Russian national oil company. The transaction has been valued at about $27 billion. | Not included in those calculations is Mr. Dudley’s boldest move: the recent agreement to sell BP’s 50 percent share of its Russian affiliate TNK-BP. In that complex transaction, BP is to receive $12.3 billion in cash and a 19.75 percent stake in Rosneft, the Russian national oil company. The transaction has been valued at about $27 billion. |
In a call with reporters on Tuesday, Mr. Dudley said that BP planned to substantially increase exploration drilling, moving to 15 to 25 wells a year, from nine currently. This year BP is drilling in Brazil, Angola and Namibia. Mr. Dudley said that the changes “created a strong foundation for our future.” | |
Despite the moves and the rise in the stock price, there are still plenty of signs that BP is a wounded company. The improvements for the quarter were largely the results of refining and marketing operations, some of which BP is selling. Like other companies, BP probably is benefiting from discounted prices of crude oil going into its refineries. Production in the United States — where BP has high-margin oil — was down slightly. | |
Moreover, BP has not reached a settlement with the United States government on damages from the Gulf of Mexico spill. The company has seven drilling rigs — the most it has ever had — operating in the highly profitable gulf to restore production and bring new output online. | |
“We are still waiting for evidence of a turnaround in the gulf,” said Peter Hutton, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in London. | |
BP also responded to pressure from investors to increase its dividend. “The markets were reassured by the rise in the dividend,” Mr. Hutton said. “This was indicative of greater confidence in an improvement in cash flows.” | BP also responded to pressure from investors to increase its dividend. “The markets were reassured by the rise in the dividend,” Mr. Hutton said. “This was indicative of greater confidence in an improvement in cash flows.” |
BP’s position in Russia is perhaps where it may have the biggest lead on rivals, despite the problems with TNK-BP. | BP’s position in Russia is perhaps where it may have the biggest lead on rivals, despite the problems with TNK-BP. |
The investment in TNK-BP was enormously profitable for BP, but an exit was perhaps unavoidable. The TNK-BP partnership was plagued by infighting with BP’s Russian partners. The sale to Rosneft was probably the only one BP could have made. | The investment in TNK-BP was enormously profitable for BP, but an exit was perhaps unavoidable. The TNK-BP partnership was plagued by infighting with BP’s Russian partners. The sale to Rosneft was probably the only one BP could have made. |
And because BP will be able to claim Rosneft’s production and reserves, it will not lose much in output from selling off TNK-BP and may actually gain in reserves. Where it will lose is in cash flow. TNK-BP has provided an annual average of $2.2 billion a year in cash dividends to BP, according to Bernstein Research. Rosneft is likely to provide only about $500 million, Bernstein says. BP is, however, gaining $12.3 billion in cash on the sale. | |
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