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Sparks
fly as ExxonMobil profit tops 10 billion dollars
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
07 28 06
Surging oil prices helped drive quarterly profits for US energy giant
ExxonMobil to 10.36 billion dollars, the latest in a string of mammoth
earnings reports that have drawn fire for the industry.
The second-quarter profit was up 36 percent from a year ago and approached
the company's all-time record profit of 10.71 billion dollars at the
end of last year, the biggest for any company.
Stoked by skyrocketing crude-oil prices, ExxonMobil's net profit in
the quarter to June came to 1.72 dollars per share. That handily beat
Wall Street forecasts for an earnings figure of 1.64 dollars.
Total revenues in the three months rose 11.8 percent from the same quarter
of 2005 to 99 billion dollars.
In Congress, Democratic lawmakers said the sky-high profits reflected
misplaced policies by the administration of President George W. Bush
and his vice president, Dick Cheney, who are both former oil executives.
"Americans are paying near-record gas prices, oil companies are
reaping billions in profits, but the response from the Oil Men in the
White House and the Republicans in Congress has been billions for Big
Oil and a backhand to the American people," Senate Democratic leader
Harry Reid said.
The soaring profits of ExxonMobil and other oil groups have generated
fierce criticism about the industry profiting from consumer misery,
prompting some US lawmakers to call for a "windfall" profits
tax.
The oil industry has countered by saying its profit margins are lower
than many other sectors, and that much of the earnings are reinvested
in new production.
ExxonMobil said it continued its "active investment program"
in the second quarter, spending 4.9 billion dollars on capital and exploration
projects. It also distributed 7.9 billion dollars to shareholders in
the second quarter through dividends and share purchases.
ConocoPhillips, the number three US oil and gas firm, on Wednesday said
its second-quarter net profit jumped 65 percent from a year ago to 5.2
billion dollars, buoyed by record petroleum prices.
Chevron, the second-largest US oil group, was to report its profit on
Friday.
Globally, Anglo-Dutch energy group Royal Dutch Shell has reported a
net profit of 6.314 billion dollars. Britain's BP said earlier this
week profits rose 22 percent to 6.118 billion dollars.
"BP used to stand for British Petroleum, now it just stands for
Bloated Profits," US Representative Ed Markey said after the BP
release.
On Thursday, Markey added, "While American families get tipped
upside down and have their savings shaken out of their pockets at the
gas pump, the Bush-Cheney team devises even more ways to line Big Oil's
pockets."
The California-based Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights said
sky-high fuel prices had nothing to do with oft-cited factors such as
Middle East unrest or instability in Nigeria.
"Refining profits at this level are pure greed and the real explanation
for outrageous prices at the pump," said the FTCR's Judy Dugan.
Kimberly DuBord, analyst at the research firm Briefing.com, said meanwhile
that ExxonMobil and other energy firms remain a good investment.
"The three largest oil and gas producers in the world generated
profits of nearly 23 billion dollars in the second quarter," she
said, noting that ExxonMobil is now generating one billion dollars each
day in revenues.
"The profit growth of the supermajors is tremendous and the interim
results continue to exceed expectations," she said.
ExxonMobil shares faded after early gains and closed down 0.2 percent
at 66.47 dollars.
AFP 27 2125 GMT 07 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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