Shell Yearly Profits Surge Four-Fold as Fuel Prices Rocket Upward

Shell Yearly Profits Surge Four-Fold as Fuel Prices Rocket Upward
Shell's refinery in Pernis, Netherlands, on Nov. 15, 2021. Robin Utrecht/ANP/AFP via Getty Images
Naveen Athrappully
Updated:

Oil company Shell recorded a quadrupling of yearly profits as oil and gas prices reached peak levels, leading the company to buy back shares and increase shareholder dividends.

“2021 was a momentous year for Shell,” said company CEO Ben van Beurden in the earnings report published Feb. 3. “Progress made in 2021 will enable us to be bolder and move faster.”

“We delivered very strong financial performance in 2021, and our financial strength and discipline underpin the transformation of our company. Today we are stepping up our distributions with the announcement of an $8.5 billion share buyback programme and we expect to increase our dividend per share by around 4% for Q1 2022.”

The adjusted earnings for Q4 2021 was $6.39 billion, an increase of over 50 percent over $4.13 billion in the third quarter. For the full year 2021, the adjusted earnings came to $19.29 billion, a 300-percent jump from the previous year’s $4.85 billion, exceeding analysts’ expectations of $17.8 billion.

Cash Flow From Operating Activities, excluding working capital (CFFO ex. WC), was $11.14 billion in Q4 2021 while it was $17.47 billion for the previous quarter. The total CFFO ex. WC for 2021 was $55.47 billion which was 88 percent more than 2020’s $29.50 billion.

Drastic expansion of oil and gas prices following the pandemic recovery boosted the company’s earnings. Currently trading at $53.41, the share price for the London-based company has gone up nearly 20 percent year-to-date.

While capital expenditure is predicted to be at the lower end of $23–27 billion for this year, Shell has reduced net debt by $23 billion from 2020 to $52.6 billion last year. The company has announced share buybacks of $8.5 billion during the first half of 2021, and increased dividends by about 4 percent to $0.25 per share for the first quarter. Shell had cut its dividends in early 2020.

Shell completed the acquisition of Missouri-based solar and energy storage developer Savion and signed a gas concession agreement in Oman in December 2021. In January, Shell, along with ScottishPower, won contracts to develop wind power in the UK, and also started up a hydrogen hydrolyzer with 20MW production capacity in China.

Shell sold the Permian business in the United States at the end of last year, adding $3 billion to the fourth quarter earnings. The company also acquired Australian online energy retailer Powershop in February.

According to the Independent, the average price at which Shell sold gas had doubled during the last 6 months to $8.88 per thousand cubic feet while its “Upstream” business, which refers to extraction of fossil fuels, sold oil at a price hike of 18 percent.
Naveen Athrappully
Naveen Athrappully
Author
Naveen Athrappully is a news reporter covering business and world events at The Epoch Times.
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