Exxon Mobil profit tops $10 billion

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PVS
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE:XOM - news), the world's largest public oil company, on Thursday reported quarterly profit surged 35 percent to more than $10 billion, driven by yet another quarter of sharply higher oil prices.

It was the second-largest quarterly operating profit ever posted by a U.S. company, just shy of the Texas behemoth's own record fourth quarter profit reported in January.

The results sailed past Wall Street forecasts and sent its shares to an all-time high, but triggered a fresh bout of outrage from U.S. lawmakers and consumer groups angry at Big Oil's handsome profits in the midst of high gasoline prices.

"While American families get tipped upside down and have their savings shaken out of their pockets at the gas pump, the Bush-Cheney team devises even more ways to line Big Oil's pockets," Rep. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, said in a statement on Exxon's profits. He is a member of the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee.

Exxon expects the attacks from politicians to continue as U.S. mid-term elections come up later in the year, Ken Cohen, its public affairs vice president told a conference call.

The oil industry has been waging an aggressive public relations campaign against the backlash, and ran full page advertisements playing down the size of the profits in newspapers like the New York Times on Thursday.

In a surprise move, Exxon -- notorious for rarely changing its plans no matter how high oil prices are -- boosted its capital spending forecast for the year to $20 billion, citing fresh exploration and production opportunities.

The company, the world's largest by market capitalization, also said it planned to increase its already hefty stock buyback program to $7 billion in the third quarter to make use of its ballooning hoard of cash.

Soaring prices, stronger refining margins and higher oil and gas production all combined to boost Exxon's second-quarter earnings to $10.36 billion, or $1.72 a share.

That is up from $7.64 billion, or $1.20 a share a year earlier, and above the average Wall Street forecast of $1.64 a share, according to Reuters Estimates.

Revenue jumped 12 percent to $99.03 billion -- bigger than the economies of many small countries -- from $88.57 billion a year earlier but below the Reuters Estimates' forecast of $104.26 billion.

BUMPER QUARTER ... AGAIN

Exxon, like its peers, has enjoyed another in a string of bumper quarters as crude oil prices hovered at historic highs. Oil prices, on a steady rise in recent years because of growing Asian demand and fears of supply disruptions, hit a record high of $78.40 a barrel two weeks ago on anxiety over Middle East supplies.

"They're just benefiting from a strong commodity cycle and doing a very good job of it," said Lysle Brinker, analyst with energy research firm John S. Herold. "But they don't operate in a vacuum and they realize that. They're going to get tons of spears and blow darts from political and consumer groups."

Exxon is the latest oil major to report blockbuster profits this quarter, coming on the heels of Royal Dutch Shell Plc's (RDSa.L) 36 percent profit rise earlier on Thursday, and a 65 percent profit surge reported by No. 3 U.S. oil company ConocoPhillips on Wednesday.

Exxon's oil and gas production jumped 6 percent on higher volumes in West Africa and Qatar, partly offset by maturing fields. Excluding divestments and the impact of high oil prices on production-sharing contracts, total output grew 9 percent.

Analysts said that healthy spurt in production accounted for much of the company's stronger than expected profit.

"The rate of Exxon's upstream production growth had arguably been a cause for concern among some investors," J.P. Morgan analysts said in a research note. "However, today's results should give investors more confidence in Exxon's ability to grow volumes.

The company's new capital spending forecast of $20 billion this year is up from a previous estimate of roughly $19 billion. Exxon said less than a third of the hike was due to higher costs sweeping across the industry and that the bulk of the rise was due to increased drilling in places like Nigeria.

Exxon shares rose less than 1 percent, or 51 cents, to $67.06 on the
New York Stock Exchange in afternoon trade after touching an all-time high of $67.65 earlier in the day.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060727/bs_nm/energy_exxon_earns_dc_6

PVS
yeah, its 2 weeks late, but i missed this gem among all the recent middle east chaos.

Soleran
Well I believe last time I said as consumers we should prepare for anything. Well now for a second quarter I suppose the phrase "screw me once shame on you, screw me twice shame on me."

It's gotten out of hand.

docb77
Honestly, I don't care so much how much they make. It's just how much I spend that really bugs me.

I also really don't care how many miles per gallon I get. I care about how many miles per dollar wink

debbiejo
God!! paying over $3.00 a gallon............costs me over 30 bucks to fill up now........thank god I don't have a SUV..............it's like 60 d0llars.........sorry for the countries that had to pay over a6.........

WrathfulDwarf
Gas companies making millions? I don't need a newspaper to tell me that...all I have to do is pump gasoline into my car and drive away.

FistOfThe North
Being pro-business and as much as I hated to write this, I think that this is definitely a case that calls for the government to step in.

docb77
Originally posted by debbiejo
God!! paying over $3.00 a gallon............costs me over 30 bucks to fill up now........thank god I don't have a SUV..............it's like 60 d0llars.........sorry for the countries that had to pay over a6.........


Personally, I wouldn't mind paying $100 per gallon for fuel... IF my car could run on 3 gallons for an entire year.

Like I said, it ain't the miles per gallon; it's the miles per dollar!

PVS
Originally posted by FistOfThe North
Being pro-business and as much as I hated to write this, I think that this is definitely a case that calls for the government to step in.

they OWN the government

VanillaCocaCola
Originally posted by PVS
they OWN the government They are the government.

PVS
same thing

WickedTexasMomA
Its time like these I miss my Eclipse, I can understand now why SUV are so cheap.lol

VanillaCocaCola
And RV's.

WickedTexasMomA
No Joke, I don't even want to think of how much it would take to fill an RV. My tank is around 55-60 to fill up. An Rv, might as well just buy out the pump.lol

Bardock42
Hmm...I wish I'd own Exxon...

Strangelove
The thing about Big Oil that pisses me off is when they testified before the Senate Commerce Committee, and Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) refused to make them swear in despite several committee members requesting exactly that. Then later, it was found that the oil executives were found to not have been so truthful in their testimony (no sh!t!!!).

It's the Republican's control of goverment that's allowing Big Oil to do this, because they're all in the pockets of big businesses. And because of that, they refuse to hold them accountable for the sh!tty state of the nation.

jaden101
the biggest problem is OPEC...they can set the price of oil even in non OPEC oil producing countries by switching on and off the pumps as they please

hence by doing this they have managed to push other countries oil prices high as well as there own

botankus
The hybrid's looking better each day. Too bad there's no place around town that could repair them if I had one.

Mr. Sandman
Get a motorcycle.

Some get 45-50 miles per gallon as opposed to a car which tops out at 30.

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