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Exxon Mobil posts $10.49B profit in 3Q

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  • Exxon Mobil posts $10.49B profit in 3Q

    By STEVE QUINN, AP Business Writer

    DALLAS - Oil industry behemoth Exxon Mobil Corp. said Thursday its third-quarter earnings rose to $10.49 billion, the second-largest quarterly profit ever recorded by a publicly traded U.S. company. Its shares rose to a 52-week high.

    The report comes as high crude prices this year have fueled record profits in the oil industry, triggering an outcry from consumers who were being asked to pay about $3 a gallon for gasoline in early August.

    The largest quarterly profit ever was Exxon Mobil's $10.71 billion profit in the fourth quarter of 2005.

    They may beat that next quarter, said Howard Silverblatt Standard & Poor's Senior Index Analyst. "Then in all likelihood they will be at that $40 billion mark for the year."

    That would put the company on track for the highest annual profit ever by a U.S. company. Exxon Mobil holds that record with a 2005 profit of $36.1 billion.

    Although crude oil prices began to decline toward the end of the third quarter, the average market price for crude held at around $70 a barrel in the period after peaking above $78 per barrel in July. Oil futures prices have recently traded near $61 a barrel, and gasoline prices have dropped to an average of about $2.43 a gallon.

    Exxon Mobil, the world's biggest public oil company said its net income amounted to $1.77 per share for the July-September period, up from $9.92 billion, or $1.58 per share, a year ago.

    The results surpassed the expectations of Wall Street analysts. On average, analysts expected the company to earn $1.59 per share in the quarter.

    Exxon Mobil shares rose $1.32, or 1.8 percent, to a new 52-week high of $72.33 in morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Revenue fell to $99.59 billion from $100.72 billion from a year ago, which saw then-record oil prices because of hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

    Another major international oil company, Royal Dutch Shell PLC said its third-quarter profit fell 34 percent to $5.94 billion even as revenues rose 10 percent to $84.3 billion. But the Anglo-Dutch company's operating profit rose as higher oil prices outweighed worsening refining margins.

    Earlier this week, ConocoPhillips reported its profit rose 2 percent to $3.88 billion in the third quarter while another major oil company, BP PLC, said its earnings fell 3.6 percent to $6.23 billion.

    A fifth major oil company, Chevron Corp., is expected to report its results Friday.

    High oil prices helped Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil realize earnings from its oil and gas drilling activities of $6.49 billion, up 13 percent from the prior year. The company also saw stronger earnings from its refining operations and gas stations, and profits at its chemicals segment more than doubled.

    ___

    AP Business Writer Lauren Villagran in New York contributed to this report.

  • #2
    Chevron profit hits $5B for first time; oil's 'Big 5' have made $95B so far this year

    SAN RAMON, Calif. (AP) — A $5 billion third-quarter profit from Chevron (CSX) lifts the cumulative results of the five major oil companies that reported July-through-September earnings this week to more than $31.5 billion.
    The industry benefited from oil prices that averaged more than $70 a barrel, as well as its ability to earn more money from gasoline production and sales. Chevron's profits grew the fastest among its peer group, rising a whopping 40% from a year ago.

    Chevron's results, released Friday, marked the third time in the past year that its quarterly results have hit a new high. The third-quarter earnings were also far above analyst estimates.

    The boom times at Chevron and other major oil companies have exasperated motorists and politicians as gasoline prices remained above $3 a gallon in many parts of the country before a recent decline eased some of the economic pain and frustration.

    But the downturn in energy prices hasn't sapped the financial vigor of Chevron and its industry brethren.

    ExxonMobil (XOM), the only U.S. oil company larger than Chevron, posted a third-quarter profit of $10.5 billion— the second highest in its history.

    Chevron's earnings of $5.02 billion, or $2.29 a share, compared with net income of $3.59 billion, or $1.64 a share, at the same time last year.

    Chevron boosted its earnings despite a slight decline in its revenue, which totaled $54.2 billion. That was down from $54.5 billion last year.

    The performance topped the average estimate of $2.03 a share among analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial.

    While more productive refineries contributed to Chevron's upturn, Oppenheimer analyst Fadel Gheit said the company reaped its biggest gains at the gasoline pumps. "They really cleaned up there," Gheit said.

    Without providing specifics, Chevron Chief Financial Officer Steve Crowe confirmed during a Friday conference call that the company's profit margins were higher at the gasoline pump than at its oil refineries.

    Chevron's profit from refining oil and selling gasoline nearly tripled during the latest quarter. Those operations earned $1.4 billion this year compared to $573 million last year. The turnaround was especially dramatic in the United States, where Chevron's refining profit surged to a nearly six-fold improvement.

    The company would have made more money last year if extensive damage caused by Hurricane Katrina and other major storms in the Gulf of Mexico hadn't shut down one of the company's biggest refineries in September and October.

    Despite the improving fortunes of Exxon and Chevron, the combined third-quarter profit of the world's five largest oil companies tapered off.

    Exxon, Chevron, ConocoPhillips (COP), BP (BP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA) earned a total of $31.6 billion in this year's quarter, a 4% decrease from $32.9 billion a year ago.

    Those companies still remain well ahead of 2005's record-setting pace. Through the first nine months of this year, the companies earned a combined $94.5 billion, an 11% increase from $85 billion last year.

    The future months are likely to be less fruitful with oil prices hovering around $60 a barrel, down from a mid-July peak of $78.40.

    "As far as record earnings are concerned, the game is over," Gheit said.

    Analysts, on average, expect Chevron's earnings in the fourth quarter to be $1.81 a share — about 20% less than the third quarter. The fourth-quarter forecast also represent a slight decline from Chevron's profit during the final three months of 2005.

    News of Chevron's latest record profit comes less than two weeks before Californians vote on an initiative, Proposition 87, that would impose special tax of up to 6% tax on oil produced in the state to finance alternative fuel research.

    As California's largest oil company, Chevron has been spending heavily to defeat the proposed measure, arguing that it would drive up gas prices. The initiative's backers, including former President Clinton, are touting the tax a way to lessen California's dependence on foreign oil.

    If the initiative passes, Chevron expects to pay about $200 million in annual taxes, Crowe said.

    Apparently worried its record third quarter might help rally support for the proposed tax, Chevron has been emphasizing its financial commitment to help find more oil and develop other energy sources.

    The company said it has invested at least $1 billion in 20 major projects, including a recently discovered petroleum pool off the coasts of Louisiana and Texas that could turn into the nation's largest oil field. Chevron said it also has spent more than $1.5 billion on the quest for alternative energy since 2000.

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    • #3
      All of Bush's buddies are doing well, while everyone else is struggling.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by drews29
        All of Bush's buddies are doing well, while everyone else is struggling.

        if you are struggling it is your own fault, not bush's....This country is full of pooportunity.....Weak people blame others for their shortcomings....If you are not making it.....educate yourself...move jobs....but quit your bitching....The economy is humming........stock market is cranking.......No terror on our soil.....Stop whining......

        I bet BC made 10.49 Million this quarter...nobody is bitching at Monte

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        • #5
          Originally posted by TwoTonTony
          if you are struggling it is your own fault, not bush's....This country is full of pooportunity.....Weak people blame others for their shortcomings....If you are not making it.....educate yourself...move jobs....but quit your bitching....The economy is humming........stock market is cranking.......No terror on our soil.....Stop whining......

          I bet BC made 10.49 Million this quarter...nobody is bitching at Monte
          If that was the case I would be retired

          Comment

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