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ExxonMobil
draws more fire with 8.4 billion dollar profit
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
04 28 06
US oil giant ExxonMobil on Thursday announced a first-quarter profit
of 8.4 billion dollars, adding further fuel to the debate over soaring
consumer energy costs.
The earnings were up seven percent from a year ago, but below the record
in the prior quarter that ignited a political firestorm. Ironically,
at 1.37 dollars per share, the profit was below the average Wall Street
estimate of 1.46 dollars.
Revenue rose in the latest three months to 88.98 billion dollars from
82.05 billion in the same period a year earlier.
The world's biggest oil and gas company had posted a profit of 10.7
billion dollars in the fourth quarter of 2005, bringing the full-year
earnings to a record 36.1 billion dollars.
Still, the hefty profits drew scrutiny at a time when Congress is considering
imposing a so-called windfall profits tax and studying the causes of
record-high fuel costs.
"It is a travesty that oil companies should be making such staggering
profits on the backs of Americans trying to fill their gas (petrol)
tanks," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid said.
"Americans expect their government to do something to help, and
it's time for the Republican Congress to act. Democrats have offered
real solutions to provide immediate relief, and I hope Bush Republicans
will join us to ease the burden on the American people."
"ExxonMobil's report of a record 8.4 billion dollars in first-quarter
profits demonstrates that skyrocketing gasoline prices are due to oil
company profiteering, rather than the price of crude oil," according
to the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a consumer advocacy
group.
"The oil company's continuously larger profits prove that prices
at the pump have far outstripped the rise of crude oil prices and that
public anger is entirely justified."
The relatively slow growth in earnings from a year ago was attributed
in part to higher tax payments. The company paid 7.06 billion dollars
in taxes for the period, up 40 percent from a year ago.
Year-ago results included a gain of 460 million dollars from the sale
of ExxonMobil's interest in Sinopec.
The world's biggest company in terms of revenues and market value said
higher crude oil and natural gas realizations and improved marketing
margins were partly offset by lower chemical margins in the latest quarter.
The results come at a time when oil companies are on the defensive against
charges of price gouging sparked by US consumers angry that the industry
is enjoying record profits while gasoline costs are rising.
Exxon recently provoked even more ire after it awarded its outgoing
chairman, Lee Raymond, a retirement package totaling nearly 400 million
dollars.
With House and Senate elections coming up in November, politicians have
responded to the rising tide of anger calling for increased scrutiny
on the industry's practices, while some have even proposed a windfall
tax that would impose new levies on profits above a certain limit unless
they're reinvested in finding new energy supplies.
Facing bipartisan calls for action, President George W. Bush earlier
this week announced he would stop putting oil into the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve in an effort to lower crude prices that last week peaked above
75 dollars a barrel.
Shares of the company were down 1.1 percent to close at 62.42 dollars.
Kimberly DuBord at Briefing.com called the report "a big miss for
Exxon."
"Considering the recent run across the energy patch, look for a
correction as several companies have missed what are certainly lofty
expectations," DuBord said, but suggested that the drop could be
a buying opportunity.
"We recommend investors add on pullbacks given the continued tightness
in the energy markets coupled with geopolitical uncertainties,"
the analyst said.
On Wednesday ConocoPhillips reported first-quarter profit rose 13 percent
from a year ago to 3.29 billion dollars with revenues surging on high
oil prices.
Revenues jumped 23 percent from a year ago, pumped up by record high
crude oil prices, to 37.9 billion dollars.
AFP
27 04 06 2136 GMT
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© 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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