BP boosts dividend, buybacks as profit soars
BP increased its dividend and ramped up share buybacks after second-quarter profit rose to $2.8 billion, joining rivals in boosting…
BP increased its dividend and ramped up share buybacks after second-quarter profit rose to $2.8 billion, joining rivals in boosting shareholder returns on the back of higher oil prices and a global recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
The surge in cash put wind in the sails of Chief Executive Bernard Looney’s one-year-old plan to shift the company away from oil and gas to renewable and low-carbon energy in an effort to battle climate change.
Rivals including Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa), TotalEnergies and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) also boosted shareholder returns last week in a sign of the sector’s recovery from a bruising year that saw energy demand plummet due to the pandemic.
BP (LON:BP) increased its dividend by 4% to 5.46 cents after it was halved to 5.25 cents in July 2020 for the first time in a decade in the wake of the pandemic slump.
BP also plans to repurchase $1.4 billion in the coming months after generating surplus cash of $2.4 billion in the first half of the year, it said.
In April, BP launched a $500 million buyback plan to offset dilution from an employee share distribution programme.
Looney said in a statement that the measures were possible due to a stronger performance of the business as well as “an improving outlook”.
BP said it expects global oil demand to recover to pre-pandemic levels sometime in the second half of 2022.
BP’s underlying replacement cost profit, the company’s definition of net earnings, reached $2.8 billion in the second quarter, compared with analysts’ expectations for a $2.15 billion profit.
That compares with $2.63 billion in profit in the first quarter of the year and a loss of $6.68 billion a year earlier when it took large non-cash charges.
BP said it has increased its price forecast for benchmark Brent crude oil to 2030 to reflect expected supply constraints, while also lowering its longer-term price forecast because it expects an acceleration in the transition to renewable energy.
As a result, the company increased the pre-tax value of its assets by $3 billion. That comes after BP wrote down over $17 billion last year after lowering its price expectations.
The company said at oil price of $60 a barrel, it expects to be able to buy $1 billion in shares and boost its dividend annually by 4% through 2025.
Brent oil prices rose in the second quarter to an average of $69 a barrel from $61 in the previous quarter and $29.56 a barrel in the second quarter of 2020.
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