TotalEnergies will cut its share buybacks by 62 per cent in the first quarter, it said on Wednesday, as low oil and gas prices negated soaring fourth-quarter profit from refining fuels and proceeds from renewable assets stake sales.
The French oil major’s fourth-quarter adjusted net income fell to $3.8 billion (3.2 billion euros) from $4.4 billion a year earlier. Analysts had expected $3.9 billion, according to a consensus compiled by LSEG. It said it will reduce its first-quarter buyback to $750 million worth of shares, echoing similar moves by peers BP , which completely suspended buybacks, and Equinor’s 70 per cent reduction. Total’s decision is at the low end of September guidance that warned of reduced buybacks due to lower oil prices and uncertain geopolitical conditions. It had kept buybacks at around $2 billion per quarter since mid-2022, when Brent crude prices peaked above $100 per barrel, and repurchased $1.5 billion in shares in the fourth quarter. Rivals Exxon and Shell have held firm on their buyback programmes. Speaking to journalists, CEO Patrick Pouyanne said that starting at the lower end of its range meant it could be adjusted upward “if market conditions favour it”. TOTAL TAKES CAUTIOUS APPROACH AMID DEPRESSED PRICES “We think caution is the right approach,” RBC analysts said in a note, adding that given current prices, there was “upside” to this through the year. The company’s shares were up 1.6 per cent at 0855 GMT. Total ramped up oil and gas production in the fourth quarter to compensate for a 15 per cent drop in Brent crude prices and an 18 per cent drop in liquefied natural gas prices, it said.
Production rose by 5 per cent in the quarter, but income from the exploration segment still fell 21.6 per cent to $1.8 billion. Earnings for the refining and chemicals business, however, surged by 215 per cent, reaching $1 billion. TotalEnergies has previously said margins at European refineries during the period jumped 231 per cent compared to the previous year. Pouyanne had attributed that increase to U.S. sanctions on Russia’s Rosneft and Lukoil and a European Union import ban on fuels derived from Russian oil. On Wednesday, he said an EU ban on Russian gas imports by the end of 2027 is also supporting LNG demand, with European purchases absorbing the rising global supply so far. (1 euro = $1.1921)
