By Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) -Shell on Thursday missed forecasts with a 56% fall in second-quarter profit to $5 billion as oil and gas prices fell, prompting the energy giant to slow its share repurchase programme.
Shell said it would repurchase $3 billion in shares over the next three months, down from $3.6 billion in the previous three, while raising its dividend to $0.33 per share as previously announced in June.
“We will continue to prioritise share buybacks, given the value that our shares represent,” Chief Executive Officer Wael Sawan said in a statement.
In June, Shell announced it would buy back at least $5 billion in shares in the second half of the year. On Thursday it said buybacks of at least $2.5 billion will be announced at its third-quarter results.
Shell’s adjusted earnings of $5.073 billion missed company-provided analyst forecasts of $5.8 billion.
The results compared with record quarterly earnings of $11.5 billion a year earlier and $9.65 billion in the first quarter of 2023.
In June, Sawan outlined plans to boost shareholder returns and improve performance, including by keeping oil output steady, growing natural gas output and slowing down investments in lower-return renewable energy.
WEAKER QUARTER
The lower results mainly reflected lower liquefied natural gas (LNG) trading results, lower oil and gas prices, lower refining margins, and lower sales volumes, compared with the previous quarter, Shell said.
Oil and gas prices soared last year in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but energy prices have dropped sharply this year as fears of shortages have eased.
Benchmark Brent crude prices averaged $80 a barrel in the second quarter of 2023, down from $110 a year earlier.
LNG prices dropped to $11.75 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) from around $33.
Shell, the world’s top LNG trader, said earnings from its flagship division halved from the previous quarter due to a weaker performance of its trading division.
Shell reduced its debt pile to $40.3 billion by the end of the second quarter, down from $44.2 billion three months earlier, cutting its debt-to-capital ratio, known as gearing, by one percentage point to 17%.
Norway’s Equinor reported on Wednesday reported a 57% drop in second quarter profit.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla; editing by Christina Fincher and Jason Neely)