HOUSTON (AP) - Oil giants Chevron Corp. (
CVX)
(
CVX)
and Total SA (
TOT)
wrapped up a string of gargantuan, record-breaking earnings
reports Friday, a stretch in which six of the major
international oil companies topped $50 billion in combined
profit for the first time.
While the profits of unparalleled size have brought
withering criticism from Washington and disgust from
consumers across the country, very few were surprised. Crude
prices during the second quarter were nearly double what
they were a year ago.
Chevron said Friday its second-quarter profit rose 11
percent to a record $5.98 billion.
Revenue rose significantly to $82.9 billion from $56.1
billion a year ago.
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(AP) Charts show quarterly net income of Exxon
Mobil and monthly regular unleaded gas prices
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But results for the second-largest U.S. oil company
missed Wall Street forecasts and shares fell.
Like its competitors, Chevron made the bulk of its money
at its exploration and production arm, also known as the
upstream, where income nearly doubled from a year ago to
$7.25 billion.
Chevron said the average sales price for crude and
natural gas liquids was $109 a barrel in the quarter, up
from $57 a barrel in the year-earlier period.
In addition to Chevron, soaring commodity prices led to
record quarters for Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM),
ConocoPhillips, BP PLC (BP)
and Royal Dutch Shell PLC. (RDSB)
Exxon Mobil stood apart even from this crowd, logging the
largest ever quarterly operating profit for a U.S. company.
Barring companies that made huge profits on one-time gains
like bankruptcy settlements and spin-offs, Exxon Mobil holds
the top 10 records for biggest U.S. quarterly earnings.
French energy company Total SA said Friday its profit
climbed 38.7 percent in the second quarter to $7.38 billion.
Quarterly sales rose 23 percent to $75.25 billion.
Altogether, the profits of the six companies jumped more
than 40 percent in the second quarter to $51.5 billion, the
first time big Western oil companies have ever reached that
level.
Total's earnings were at the top end of analysts'
expectations.
Unlike some other oil majors, Total reported production
growth of 1.3 percent in the second quarter.
Also Friday, Norway's state-controlled StatoilHydro ASA (STO)
reported a 37 percent rise in second-quarter net profits to
$3.7 billion.
At Chevron, the company division that refines and sells
gasoline actually swung to a loss of $734 million in the
quarter after earning $1.3 billion a year ago. The culprit:
those same crude prices that lifted upstream earnings.
Like its peers, Chevron doesn't produce enough oil on its
own to feed its refineries, forcing it to buy some on the
open market. And it wasn't able to raise the price of
gasoline and other products fast enough to recover its own
rising costs for oil.
Chevron also said that planned downtime at some
refineries contributed to the loss.
"The higher cost of crude oil used in the refining
process was not fully recovered in the price of gasoline and
other refined products," said Chairman and CEO Dave
O'Reilly. "As a result, our downstream operations incurred a
loss in the second quarter, with most of the loss taking
place in the United States."
Chevron said overall production in the quarter fell about
3 percent from a year ago, hurt in part by
production-sharing contracts. However, on a conference call
with analysts Friday, company officials said project
startups will increase production in the second half of 2008
and the company should meet or exceed its full-year volume
target.
Chevron shares slipped 71 cents in afternoon trading to
$83.85. They've traded in a range of $76.40 to $104.63 in
the past year.
Total shares fell 1.2 percent to 48.79 euros ($75.95) in
Paris.
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Associated Press Writer Angela Charlton in Paris
contributed to this report.