HOUSTON – Exxon Mobil Corp on Friday reported a 56% slump in second-quarter profit, missing Wall Street bets and joining rivals hurt by a sharp drop in energy prices and lower fuel margins.
Second-quarter results from oil majors have tumbled from huge profits booked a year ago after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent oil and gas prices
Chevron Corp, Shell and TotalEnergies have reported profit falls of 48%, 56% and 49%, respectively.
Shares of Exxon and Chevron were down less than 1% in pre-market trading in
“Results came in slightly weaker than expected across earnings and cash flow,” RBC analyst Biraj Borkhataria wrote in a note. “We would expect Exxon to underperform the peer group today”.
Borkhataria said Friday’s full results from Chevron, which had posted its main numbers on Sunday, were neutral.
Net income was $7.88 billion, or 1.94 cents per share versus a record $17.85 billion a year earlier. Wall Street was expecting $2.01 per share, Refinitiv Eikon data showed.
Yet excluding last year’s record second quarter, Exxon posted its strongest result for the months of April to June in more than a decade, helped by cost cuts and the sale of less profitable assets.
“That is quite a good quarter for us,” Chief Financial Officer Kathryn Mikells told Reuters. Last year aside, she noted: “You would have to go back to the second quarter of 2011 to find the last time we produced this level of earnings in the second quarter.”