Shell accelerates share buybacks as profits soar

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Royal Dutch Shell’s profits soared to a four-year high in the third quarter, boosted by rising oil and gas prices as the company accelerated its giant $25 billion share buyback programme.

Although the $5.6 billion quarterly profit slightly missed forecasts for a fourth quarter, investors took heart from a nearly 60 per cent rise in Shell’s cash generation to $12.1 billion, as deep cost savings in recent years filtered through.

Excluding one-off charges, cashflow was the highest in 10 years at $14.7 billion, the company said on Thursday.

“Good operational delivery across all Shell businesses produced one of our strongest-ever quarters,” Chief Executive Ben van Beurden said in a statement.

Shell’s A shares were down 2.4 percent by 0830 GMT, while the broader oil and gas index was down 1 percent.

The Anglo-Dutch company launched a three-year $25 billion share buyback program in July, making good on a promise to boost shareholder returns following the 2016 acquisition of BG Group, in a show of confidence in its cash generation and profit growth outlook.

Shell said it completed the first tranche of buybacks in October for $2 billion and was launching a second tranche on Thursday of up to $2.5 billion by Jan. 28.

“The main takeaway is the very strong cash generation,” Jefferies analyst Jason Gammel told Reuters. “Continued buybacks are a pretty strong catalyst for the shares.”

Shell’s shares have come under pressure in recent months after three disappointing quarterly results that raised concerns over its ability to meet the share buyback target on top of a $15 billion annual dividend payout, the world’s biggest.

This year’s sharp rise in oil prices to a four-year high of around $85 a barrel has boosted revenues for oil and gas companies.

British rival BP on Tuesday reported its highest quarterly profits in five years, while French rival Total’s profits rose to their highest since 2012 as both firms ramped up production.

Shell’s net income attributable to shareholders in the quarter, based on a current cost of supplies (CCS) and excluding identified items, rose 39 per cent to $5.624 billion from a year ago.

That compared with $4.691 billion in the second quarter, and a company-provided analysts’ consensus of $5.766 billion.

Profits benefited from stronger oil and gas prices as well as bigger contributions from trading operations, though that was offset by weaker refining margins, tax and currency exchange effects.

Chief Financial Officer Jessica Uhl said Shell will stick to its $25 to $30 billion capital expenditure plans in the coming years despite rising waging and services costs.

“We are seeing wage inflation and inflation affecting the supply chain and we are actively managing it,” Uhl told reporters in a conference call.

Debt levels remained stubbornly high. Shell’s debt ratio versus company capitalization, known as gearing, declined to 23.1 per cent in the quarter from 23.6 per cent at the end of June.

Oil and gas production in the quarter fell 2 per cent from a year earlier to 3.596 million barrels of oil equivalent.

Output was expected to rise in the fourth quarter due to lower maintenance, Shell said. (Reuters/NAN)

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