British oil major BP reports sharp drop in fourth-quarter profit, vows strategy reset​on February 11, 2025 at 7:56 am

British oil major BP on Tuesday posted a sharp drop in fourth-quarter profit, pledging to “fundamentally” reset the embattled energy company’s strategy.British oil major BP on Tuesday posted a sharp drop in fourth-quarter profit, pledging to “fundamentally” reset the embattled energy company’s strategy.   

The BP logo is displayed outside a petrol station near Warminster in Wiltshire, England, on Aug. 15, 2022.
Matt Cardy | Getty Images News | Getty Images

British oil major BP

The energy firm posted underlying replacement cost profit — used as a proxy for net profit — at $1.169 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with $2.99 billion in the same period of last year and with an analyst forecast of $1.2 billion, according to a LSEG poll.

Oil majors have weathered a turn in tide over the past year, as crude prices retreated after initial support following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and Western and G7 sanctions against Moscow’s barrels. In a January trading update, BP flagged higher corporate costs, lower fourth-quarter realized refining margins and one-off charges linked to its bio-ethanol acquisition.

BP has broadly underperformed its peers, with shares falling roughly 9% over the last year to the end of last week — compared with 6% gains for Shell

Speculation has otherwise long mounted over whether BP could become a takeover target – though the company’s  £74-billion size could pose a challenge for suitors.

BP has sought to turn its fortunes through a major restructuring that included a downsize in leadership amid BP CEO Murray Auchincloss’ efforts to deliver at least $2 billion of cash savings by the end of 2026. In January, the firm expanded its cost-cutting drive to cut 4,700 of roles and last week revealed it is seeking buyers for its Ruhr Oel GmbH German refinery assets. But concerns linger over the clarity of BP’s strategic direction amid its sprawling green energy ambitions — with the company due to supply its next strategic update on Feb. 26.

In a Friday note, RBC analysts stressed a key point remained whether BP would reconcile its balance sheet through a slowdown of its share repurchase program – noting market expectations that the oil major would now commit to around $1 billion of buybacks per quarter, versus $1.75 billion previously.

We expect questions during the conference call on the impact on BP’s downstream operations from US tariffs on Canadian crude as it relates to the profitability of its refineries in the US,” the analysts noted, stressing that the company’s other challenge relates to poor capital allocation that has deteriorated its earnings potential.

 This breaking news story is being updated

 


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