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Exxon Mobil posts nearly $10 bln profit on record oil
Reuters ^ | Thu Oct 27, 2005

Posted on 10/27/2005 7:19:19 AM PDT by sumocide

Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's largest publicly traded oil company, on Thursday said quarterly profit surged 75 percent to nearly $10 billion, raking in a bonanza from record oil prices.

The profit was the highest in the company's history, surpassing the record it set in the 2004 fourth quarter. Revenue jumped 32 percent to just over $100 billion.

Two powerful hurricanes ripped through the Gulf of Mexico in the third quarter, disrupting energy operations in the region and sending oil prices and refining margins sharply higher.

Exxon Mobil said net income rose to $9.9 billion, or $1.58 a share, in the third quarter from $5.68 billion, or 88 cents a share, a year earlier.

Excluding a gain of $1.62 billion from restructuring its stake in a Dutch gas transportation business, earnings were $1.32 per share. On that basis, analysts' average forecast was $1.39, according to Reuters Estimates.

Exxon shares were unchanged at $56.20 in pre-market trade.

The company's oil and gas production fell 4.7 percent from a year earlier as outages caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, maintenance activities, and maturing fields more than offset higher production from new fields in West Africa.

Excluding the impact of the hurricanes, divestments and entitlement effects, output fell 1 percent.

Still, record crude oil prices -- which touched $70 a barrel in the quarter -- pushed earnings at its exploration and production unit to $5.73 billion in the quarter, up $1.8 billion from a year earlier.

At its refining and marketing operations, profit rose to $2.13 billion, up $727 million from a year earlier, as stronger refining margins outweighed weak marketing margins and lower petroleum product sales.

Earnings at its chemicals division tumbled to $472 million, down $537 million from a year earlier, due to higher feedstock costs and lower margins.

Exxon Mobil's capital expenditures jumped to $4.41 billion from $3.63 billion a year earlier.

Shares of Exxon Mobil, the largest of the so-called "super-major" oil companies, rose more than 10 percent in the quarter, underperforming the broader Standard & Poor's integrated oil and gas index, which rose more than 13 percent.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News
KEYWORDS: exxonmobile; gas; gasprices
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Time to buy?
1 posted on 10/27/2005 7:19:21 AM PDT by sumocide
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To: sumocide

Woo-Hoo! I predict a stock split in my future! :)


2 posted on 10/27/2005 7:20:18 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: sumocide

Some of this does not make sense.

I'm all for market-based profits, but it must be a truly free market. It mustn't be interfered with by labor, management, or government.

Cartels, deals, schemes, or price controls are not a "free market."


3 posted on 10/27/2005 7:25:28 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Glad I own this stock as well, yippeeee!!


4 posted on 10/27/2005 7:28:12 AM PDT by lmavk
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To: xzins

Look, oil is a cyclical industry. When prices are down, and the oil companies are laying people off left and right, nobody feels bad for them and suggests that people should pay more at the pump. Nobody, including the oil companies, thought that oil would be this high now, they are making a lot of money, but the profits will come down as that money is reinvested at much higher costs.


5 posted on 10/27/2005 7:39:08 AM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: sumocide

My grandaddy was a wise man. Thanks Grandaddy!


6 posted on 10/27/2005 7:40:54 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance (If you want to be on my Civil Engineer ping list, just say so!)
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To: Rodney King

Like I said, I have no problem with free market profits.

But cartels, deals, schemes, price controls, etc....no matter who messes with the market for whatever reason....are not an indication of a free market.

My guts tell me something is being manipulated BEYOND the cartel (which we already know makes this a non-Free market.)


7 posted on 10/27/2005 7:42:50 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: xzins
My guts tell me something is being manipulated BEYOND the cartel (which we already know makes this a non-Free market.)

Of course there is, there is an artificial cap on production. If the companies can't produce more they will be forced to raise prices, and/or find other ways to make money. In this case they have done both, raised margins and found ways to produce more product from a formally un-desirable high sulfur crude base. They pay much less than the market price for sweet crude and pocket the difference.

I don't blame them one bit. Take away the restrictions on refineries and drilling and prices will fall dramatically.
8 posted on 10/27/2005 8:37:47 AM PDT by WackySam ("There's room for all God's creatures- right next to the taters")
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To: Fierce Allegiance

9 posted on 10/27/2005 8:38:34 AM PDT by soccer_maniac
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To: soccer_maniac

How does it look going back to 1974?


10 posted on 10/27/2005 8:40:52 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance (If you want to be on my Civil Engineer ping list, just say so!)
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To: sumocide
Supply and demand, market at work??? When supply is controlled by a handful of people, demand becomes an orphan.

Would be capitalists here seem not to understand that.

11 posted on 10/27/2005 8:40:57 AM PDT by cynicom
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To: WackySam; P-Marlowe; Rodney King; Lazmataz
Take away the restrictions on refineries and drilling and prices will fall dramatically.

That's where I think the manipulation is. As they say, "If it looks too good to be true....it probably is." They also say, "follow the money."

I've watched PBS, foundations, politics for years now, and I'm constantly amazed at the support big oil gives to the most liberal of causes. It's like they were funding their own demise or something.

So, the Sierra Club opposes refineries and the oil companies get rich. Is that it?

Tree hugging, radical environmentalists block drilling, coal, oil exploration, refineries, etc., etc.

As a result of all that oil companies have radical, enormous profitability.

If I were an oil company, I'd be hiring infiltrating the environmental movement to fake "being opposed" to by "desire" to build more refineries.

Unless...of course....they already have.

12 posted on 10/27/2005 8:48:12 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: xzins

I think you have to look beyond the MSM announcement of "record profits" and break it down to how much comes from Exxon selling oil it has pumped (At a fixed cost) to the world market (at record prices), as opposed to how much "record profit" comes from the oil it must buy on the world market to refine to gas, oil, diesel etc.

As long as we use more oil than we produce, we will always be subject to the vagaries, and uncertainties of they world market.


13 posted on 10/27/2005 9:04:18 AM PDT by MCCRon58 (Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will positively destroy my sensitive inner child.)
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To: WackySam; P-Marlowe; Rodney King; Lazmataz
CORRECTION:

If I were an oil company, I'd be hiring infiltrating the environmental movement to fake "being opposed" to by "desire" to build more refineries.

Unless...of course....they already have.

If I were an oil company, I'd be HIRING SOMEONE TO INFILTRATE the environmental movement to fake "being opposed" to MY "desire" to build more refineries.

14 posted on 10/27/2005 9:11:48 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I have this stock and I'm glad I do


15 posted on 10/27/2005 9:12:55 AM PDT by LittleMoe
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To: Fierce Allegiance

16 posted on 10/27/2005 9:28:08 AM PDT by soccer_maniac
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To: soccer_maniac

So If i was given $5,000 worth in 1974, and it was at about $2 per share, that equals approx 2500 shares. Assuming all of the 5 spilts were 2 for one spilts, that works out to 80,000 shares now. So at $60 per share, that's 4.8 million.

Nice, but after Cap Gains, etc., it's still not enough to retire at 40.


17 posted on 10/27/2005 10:11:01 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance (If you want to be on my Civil Engineer ping list, just say so!)
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To: Fierce Allegiance

OK so let's get the cap gains tax eliminated!


18 posted on 10/27/2005 10:13:33 AM PDT by petercooper (The Republican Party: We Suck Less.)
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To: petercooper

Hell yeah, then I can retire at 40! (No way, i'd be drunk & dead in a year!).

Cap gains and "the death tax" are the worst. followed by the progressive tax on the sweat of our brow. The more you work, the more you pay. Sure doesn't seem fair.


19 posted on 10/27/2005 10:18:06 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance (If you want to be on my Civil Engineer ping list, just say so!)
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To: Fierce Allegiance

"The more you work, the more you pay."

I'm on track to retire in 10 years at age 55. Sooner, if at all possible. Grandpa retired at 55, Dad at 53.

How have I done this? By following the Good Example set by my elders who have lived The Good Life. I've always lived below my means, gave 20 years of my youth to the military, invested in a tax-deferred retirement fund since I was 20, watched my tax base like a hawk when I was both single and (currently) married so I'd know how much or how little to earn, and I cut back to part-time as DH's salary kept growing over the past decade and it was actually COSTING us money in taxes for me to work full-time.

I've always had a business on the side for tax deductions, had rental properties in the past that always lost money *wink* and basically stayed under Uncle Sam's radar all these years. DH & I just started another business this past spring, and are on track to sell it within 5 years if it pans out as we've planned. Then it'll be 6 months in Mexico and 6 months in Wisconsin. Or Hawaii. Or Alaska. Or...

It can be done. But if you're already nearing 40 you gotta get busy now, LOL! :)


20 posted on 10/27/2005 1:40:45 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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