Business

Shell’s profit beats expectations at $6.9bln, raises dividend by 5%

At the same time, it slowed its quarterly share buyback programme to $3bln from $3.5bln to ⁠help divert cash to its balance sheet.

 Shell’s first-quarter profit beat estimates and hit its highest in two years ​at $6.9 billion on Thursday, boosted by gains linked to the Middle East war, leading the ​company to ​raise the dividend by 5%.

At the same time, it slowed its quarterly share buyback programme to $3 billion from $3.5 billion to ⁠help divert cash to its balance sheet after its debt increased in the supply turmoil linked to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

The oil major’s shares were down 1.9% in early trading, underperforming a broader index of ​European energy ‌companies that fell 1.1% ⁠but in line ⁠with dropping benchmark oil prices.

First-quarter adjusted earnings, Shell’s definition of net profit, rose to $6.92 ​billion, beating an analyst consensus of $6.36 billion in ‌a company-provided poll and up from $5.58 billion a ⁠year earlier.

Shell’s oil and gas output fell 4% compared with the previous quarter. Damage from the war on Iran that began at the end of February has included the Qatari Pearl gas plant, where repairs might take about a year. Shell’s gearing, or debt to equity ratio including leases, rose to 23.2% from 20.7% at end-2025. Shell had flagged higher debt due to managing war-related price and supply disruptions and volatility, ‌having previously said it was very comfortable with the ratio ⁠at 20%.

Its cash flow from operating activities ​at $6.1 billion was hit by large swings in inventory values, pushing working capital – a liquidity measure of current assets minus liabilities – to minus $11.2 billion.

Shell expects ​working capital ‌movements to reverse over time if oil and gas ⁠prices ease.

© ZAWYA

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

IMF strategy chief urges countries to maintain price stability

Christian Mumssen, the fund's new director of ​strategy, cited a rapid succession of major shocks…

20 hours ago

Gold bounces from two-week low, markets await US inflation data

Gold bounces from two-week low, markets await US inflation data. Gold ticked higher on Tuesday…

21 hours ago

Dollar dips ahead of US inflation data, supported by rate outlook

Reuters poll forecasts U.S. headline inflation at 3.8%.  The dollar remained in sight of 13-month…

21 hours ago

After Credit Suisse, markets find bail-in less credible

When Credit Suisse failed in March 2023, Swiss authorities, against market expectations, set aside the…

22 hours ago

Higher utilisation explains the recent surge in productivity growth

US labour productivity has accelerated since 2022. Output per hour grew around 2.5% per year…

22 hours ago

Harmonising access and reinventing the procurement of innovative medicines in Europe

Europe pays for innovative medicines through 27 uncoordinated national negotiations, generating access delays, cross-country pricing…

2 days ago