BP on Tuesday reported a 30% drop in third-quarter profit to $2.3 billion, the lowest in almost four years, weighed down by weaker refining margins and oil trading results.
The decline was smaller than expected amid a slowdown in global economic activity and oil demand, particularly in China, but raises pressure on CEO Murray Auchincloss, who has vowed to boost BP's performance in the face of investor concerns over its energy transition strategy.
BP shares, which ended 5% lower, compared with a 1.3% drop for rival Shell, have underperformed those of its rivals so far this year, falling 19% compared with a 3.5% decline for Shell and a 18% gain for Exxon Mobil as investors question the company's ability to generate profits. A 9% annual rise in BP's debt levels has further worried investors.
The energy giant maintained its dividend at 8 cents a share after raising it in the previous quarter. It also kept the rate of its share buyback programme at $1.75 billion over the next three months and committed to do so again for the following three months. BP will update its financial framework in February.
Auchincloss, who took up the job in January, has vowed to focus on high-margin businesses, distancing himself from predecessor Bernard Looney's strategy to rapidly expand renewables and reduce oil and gas output.
Reuters reported earlier this month, citing sources, that BP had abandoned a flagship target to cut oil and gas output by 2030.
Auchincloss told Reuters on Tuesday that BP will focus on value, not volume, for its operations. "Whenever in past rounds we've chased volume, we've gotten it wrong," he said.
The company has also scaled back its low-carbon hydrogen investments and plans to sell its U.S. onshore wind operations.
Sources also told Reuters that BP is considering selling a minority stake in its offshore wind business. Auchincloss said on Tuesday BP will bring in partners to offshore wind projects over time.
Auchincloss also said BP has the potential to grow oil and gas output through the end of the decade while it also continues to make high-grade investments in low-carbon and renewables.
"There still looks potential for a differentiated growth, driven out of fuels marketing, biogas and the core Upstream business, but it is unlikely that the market focuses on this potential until we get re-worked financial targets," Citi analysts said in a note.
WEAK REFINING
BP's underlying replacement cost profit, the company's definition of net income, reached $2.27 billion in the third quarter, exceeding forecasts of $2.05 billion in a company-provided survey of analysts but down from $2.8 billion in the previous quarter and $3.3 billion a year earlier.
The results were the weakest since the fourth quarter of 2020, when profits collapsed during the pandemic.
BP's oil and gas production rose by 3% from a year earlier to 2.38 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, helping to offset a drop in refining margins and weaker oil trading. Higher natural gas prices further boosted earnings, although gas trading was average in the quarter, BP said.
Global oil refiners are seeing profitability drop to multi-year lows in a sharp reversal for an industry that had enjoyed surging post-pandemic returns, underlining the extent of the current demand slowdown.
"Refining margins are dismal right now. The third quarter was a tough quarter, and the start of the fourth quarter is pretty bad as well," Auchincloss told Reuters.
Net debt rose to $24.3 billion from $22.6 billion at the end of June. Its debt-to-market capitalisation ratio, known as gearing, rose to 23.3% from 20.3% a year earlier.