Big Oil's biggest quarter ever: $51.5B in all

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JOHN PORRETTO | August 1, 2008 05:11 PM EST | AP

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In this July 26, 2005 file photo, smoke billows from a ChevronTexaco refinery in Richmond, Calif. Lifted by record crude prices, Chevron Corp. says its second-quarter profit rose 11 percent from a year ago, capping another round of massive earnings for the major oil companies. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)

HOUSTON — Oil giants Chevron Corp. and Total SA 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.

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., ConocoPhillips, BP PLC and Royal Dutch Shell PLC. 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.

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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 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.

____

Associated Press Writer Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

HOUSTON — Oil giants Chevron Corp. and Total SA wrapped up a string of gargantuan, record-breaking earnings reports Friday, a stretch in which six of the major international oil companies topped...
HOUSTON — Oil giants Chevron Corp. and Total SA wrapped up a string of gargantuan, record-breaking earnings reports Friday, a stretch in which six of the major international oil companies topped...
 
 

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- Irons See Profile I'm a Fan of Irons permalink

$50 Billion in profits would pay for 1/20th of the losses in the $1 Trillion mortgage crisis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 PM on 08/03/2008
- optiquest See Profile I'm a Fan of optiquest permalink

yeah right the world is laughing at us. we fight and bicker and liberals blame everything on someone else. Al Gore, Barrack Obama, and Nancy Pelosi say we need to find alternative energy as they fly their private planes (burning jet fuel) around the world. If anyone is laughing, its over the hypocrisy of the leaders just mentioned. They have no clue how to implement a new technology.

You chastise big oil for making money? they make money because they are good at what they do. nothing else. I can also say they would NOT thwart development of alernative energy, they are most likely researching them now. Why>? Its good business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 08/03/2008
- StephenJK See Profile I'm a Fan of StephenJK permalink

I am now convinced there are some "users" on here that either A) work for Big Oil PR or B) speculate oil futures (bottom feeding parasites). To them I give my middle finger and boy do your words ring hollow. We need you like a hole in the head.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 AM on 08/03/2008
- Sahaquiel See Profile I'm a Fan of Sahaquiel permalink

If this teaches us anything, it's that we should continue to give these poor, struggling oil companies everything they want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 AM on 08/03/2008
- Sloppyseconds See Profile I'm a Fan of Sloppyseconds permalink

Boy, are the oil companies laughing! Apparently the well informed (LOL!) public now believe they can drill themselves out of high gas prices by giving the oil companies whatever they want, despite the fact they have millions of acres from which to still drill on. What gets me is that there are actually people out there that think this is going to lower gas prices - unbelievable. No wonder the world is laughing at America!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 AM on 08/03/2008
- realityczech4u See Profile I'm a Fan of realityczech4u permalink

We see plenty about the big, bad oil companies. I would like to see an index that tracks what the hedge funds have made speculating in oil and other commodities. I bet it would make the oil producers' profits look like child's play. At least the oil companies put gas in our tanks. Speculators are parasites who produce nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 AM on 08/03/2008
- enlighteninglad See Profile I'm a Fan of enlighteninglad permalink

And they're probably working in collusion with the oil companies. At least from the same playbook.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 08/03/2008
- BlackWidowPilot See Profile I'm a Fan of BlackWidowPilot permalink


"I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country."

- Thomas Jefferson

Pretty much covers it IMHO.

Leland R. Erickson

Citizen

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 AM on 08/03/2008
- enlighteninglad See Profile I'm a Fan of enlighteninglad permalink

Really. Its the greedy people at the top of the corporations that is the problem. Corporations, as with government, can pool human resources to acomplish what no one man can. Corporations in and of themselves aren't a bad thing. Unbridled greed, on the other hand, is.

I'm actually listed as a corporation but I'm not "moneyed" nor part of the aristocracy. I pay anyone that would work for me well (one reason I don't have a lot myself) and I don't hire illegals. If we could just get rid of the mindset that the bottom line is to enrich the shareholders in any way and as fast as possible we'd be in a lot better shape.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 08/03/2008
- henrydavidthrow See Profile I'm a Fan of henrydavidthrow permalink

I want my own oil well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 08/02/2008
- darthdarcy See Profile I'm a Fan of darthdarcy permalink

We will eventually need to Nationalize not only the Oil Industry but all major energy...

That will be the future...and any futurist would agree...providing energy as cheaply as possible should be the governments responsibility to it's people and to promote commerce..and promote prosperity...!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 PM on 08/02/2008
- StephenJK See Profile I'm a Fan of StephenJK permalink

100% agree.....Make it a FOR REAL not for profit. As opposed to the lie Big Oil wants us to believe: they don't make more money then they ever have. Big laugh. I know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 AM on 08/03/2008
- MarkInEugene See Profile I'm a Fan of MarkInEugene permalink

Speculators in the futures markets estimate where the price will go, which forces it up into the stratosphere.....it has little to do with supply.

That big ball of fire in the sky provides the energy to make every living thing on this planet. It also indirectly produced all of our oil. The sun also propels our wind, waves and weather. Direct access to the suns energy can revolutionize the energy equation on this planet.

So much of our money is spent on an energy source (Oil) that requires billions of dollars in equipment, violent clashes of civilizations, an unhealthy dependence on greedy unethical CEO's, lobbyists and politicians as well as destructive levels of pollution to release its power.

We can largely bypass all of this with direct access to solar energy. The trillions of dollars spent globally through the blood and sweat of human toil just to feed the oil industry juggernaut could be eliminated if a critical mass of American's demand the switch to alternatives.

No More Big Oil!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 08/02/2008
- darthdarcy See Profile I'm a Fan of darthdarcy permalink

The Sun produces every second, more energy than mankind has ever used in our entire history on this planet..!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 08/02/2008
- realityczech4u See Profile I'm a Fan of realityczech4u permalink

I was always fascinated as a child with experiment of taking a magnifying glass in the direct sunlight and causing a piece of paper to burst into flames.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 AM on 08/03/2008
- Amennyc See Profile I'm a Fan of Amennyc permalink

Great! The more they make the more they can bribe and payoff people!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 PM on 08/02/2008
- FreedomBeforeDemocracy See Profile I'm a Fan of FreedomBeforeDemocracy permalink

This is true, but if you gave the federal government less power, there would be less reason to bribe them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 08/03/2008
- racetoinfinity See Profile I'm a Fan of racetoinfinity permalink

Georgie and Dick have done their work well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 08/02/2008
- helonias See Profile I'm a Fan of helonias permalink

Its time for some nationalization, it worked in Iran, Iraq, Venezuela and Mexico.

And what is the price of gas in these countries

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:30 PM on 08/02/2008
- Chubbster See Profile I'm a Fan of Chubbster permalink

Nationalized oil companies have a history of being run into the ground.
See Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico. All in steep decline.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 PM on 08/02/2008
- wadenelson1 See Profile I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 permalink

Oil companies should be forced by legislation to re-invest 90% of that profit in renewable energy sources instead of just handing out fat checks to stockholders GETTING RICH OFF THE REST OF US.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 08/02/2008
- RightWingMarine See Profile I'm a Fan of RightWingMarine permalink

Anybody can buy their stock. It's available to you. Is it Chevron's fault if you don't buy stock and take your risk with the rest of them?

Really, reinvest 90%? That certainly wouldn't cause the oil companies to reconsider doing business in this country altogether. In 2002 Farmers Insurance said good bye to 700,000 customers because the state of TX had made it too expensive for Farmers to want to offer home owners insurance. Could Farmers have stayed in TX and continued making a profit? Sure, other companies did. But it was less of a profit and more work on the part of the insurance company. They did the analysis and decided they would be better off losing 700,000 policy holders and to not insure homes in Texas because they could make more money elsewhere. All this talk of putting super taxes on the oil companies, how far do you think you can push that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 08/02/2008
- Bushwillresign See Profile I'm a Fan of Bushwillresign permalink

Wrongrightwingmarine, the insurance companies in Florida tried to stop writing homeowners insurance also. Legislators said you can't write auto insurance in Florida and stop insuring homeowners at the same time. Why would these insurance companies want to insure a home when they know hurricanes are acommin?

As far as the purchase of stock goes, if we were all in on the meeting where it was agreed that gas prices would go up in the last year of the bush presidency. We would have all bought as much stock as we could. Remember, it was a private meeting between the oil companies.

"They did the analysis and decided they would be better off losing 700,000 policy holders than to pay for 700,000 homes that are blown away by the next hurricane". "They could make more money elsewhere like in tornado alley. There are many rebuilt homes that could use insuring in Kansas, Missouri, etc.

Keep up reading rwm, you have a lot to learn...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:31 PM on 08/03/2008
- iseebs See Profile I'm a Fan of iseebs permalink

The thing with stocks is:
Rich people can buy a lot and get even richer.
Poor people do not have any money left to buy stocks and remain poor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 08/02/2008
- Davwbaird See Profile I'm a Fan of Davwbaird permalink

Yes they raise their rates on everyone as a result of moving out of texas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 08/02/2008
- Chubbster See Profile I'm a Fan of Chubbster permalink

Except that is not what happens. The money goes into exploration and recovery. Stock holders get a small amount.
Instead of propaganda's posturing, you might instead be congruent with reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:19 PM on 08/02/2008
- photog606 See Profile I'm a Fan of photog606 permalink

The shadowy group (ie: non-existent) "al Qaeda" only wishes it could inflict the kind of damage on the US economy the likes of such companies as Enron and the oil giants continue to do...

GM Has $15.5 Billion Loss on U.S. Sales Drop
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=agMEuJ_r_yxA&refer=worldwide

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:48 PM on 08/02/2008
- darthdarcy See Profile I'm a Fan of darthdarcy permalink

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are doing al-Qaeda's work for them..!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 PM on 08/02/2008
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