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Exxon Mobil posts lowest annual profit since '02

By CHRIS KAHN
,
AP
posted: 8 DAYS 11 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
NEW YORK -Exxon Mobil's earnings fell by more than half to $19.3 billion in 2009, the lowest total in seven years, as company refineries struggled with a plunge in global fuel consumption. But Exxon remains the profit champion among U.S. public companies.
The world's largest publicly traded oil company finished the year with a 23 percent decline in fourth-quarter income. Exxon now has posted lower profits for five straight quarters after setting a record of $14.83 billion in the third quarter of 2008.
Like rivals ConocoPhillips and Chevron, Exxon's business of exploring for and producing oil benefited from an increase in crude prices at the end of 2009. But weak demand for gasoline, heating oil and other products severely depressed profits at the major oil companies' refineries.
Exxon's results have swung with the price of oil and the impact of the global recession. When oil spiked above $147 a barrel in mid-2008, Exxon set ever-higher marks for earnings by a U.S. company. Then oil prices plummeted, and Exxon suffered a yearlong hangover that included its smallest quarterly earnings in several years.
The Irving, Texas company earned $6.05 billion, or $1.27 a share, for the final three months of 2009. That compares with $7.82 billion, or $1.54 a share, a year earlier. Revenue increased 6 percent to $89.8 billion. The fourth-quarter results still beat analysts expectations and shares rose $1.75, or 2.7 percent, to $66.18.
For the full year, Exxon earned $3.98 a share. That compares with a record-breaking year in 2008, when Exxon recorded the highest profit ever for a U.S. company — $45.2 billion, or $8.66 a share. Still, Exxon will remain the highest-earning company in the S&P 500 index, a rank it has held since 2000 after its acquisition of Mobil Corp. By comparison, Wal-Mart is expected to earn $14 billion for the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, while Microsoft earned $14.6 billion in the fiscal year ended in June 2009.
Exxon's U.S. refineries lost $287 million in the fourth quarter as the price of gasoline was outpaced by the rise in the price the company paid for crude oil. Profits from the international refining and marketing business dropped 96 percent.
Chevron Corp. said last week its fourth-quarter profit fell as it lost $613 million in its refining business. ConocoPhillips posted a $1.2 billion fourth-quarter profit, but its refineries lost $215 million.
Valero Energy Corp., America's largest independent petroleum refiner, lost almost $2 billion in 2009.
But while those companies plan to wind down parts of their downstream business to cut losses. Exxon said it doesn't plan to follow.
"We don't see a need right now for any significant restructurings at this time," said David Rosenthal, Exxon's vice president of investor relations. "But we'll see how things go."
Exxon has sold some of its interests in various refineries and pipelines during the past several years, Rosenthal added.
Despite the drop in annual revenue, Exxon boosted spending by 4 percent in 2009 to $27.1 billion.
Exxon is expanding its natural gas operations. It has announced plans to buy XTO Energy in a deal that was worth about $29 billion at the time. XTO is a major holder of natural gas assets in the U.S. Exxon would become a major player in what is expected to be a robust market for the cleaner-burning fuel.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2010-02-01 17:16:09
COMMENTS ( 35 )
Page 1 of 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>
Stryyder56
4:14PM Oct 29 2009 
Another excellent idea from you Judy. Let the government run the oil companies. They cannot run anything without a deficit involved. How much will gas and heating oil cost then?
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Stryyder56
4:12PM Oct 29 2009 
Judy, you have no idea what you are talking about. Yeah, good idea shutdown a multinational company that supplies gas and heating oil to most of the stations and oil delivery companies in the US. Care to find out how cold it will get???
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Stryyder56
4:09PM Oct 29 2009 
WanamakerJ you are spot on. All of these folks ranting and raving about profits do not realize that if companies suchas Exxon/Mobile do not make a profit, indeed, everyone suffers. They cannot see the forest for the tree's. Sure turn it all over to the government who cannot find its ass with both hands in broad daylight.
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Missmymind2353
4:08PM Oct 29 2009 
NOW WE KNOW WHY PRICES ARE GOING UP
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Stryyder56
4:00PM Oct 29 2009 
Judy, it seems you have the same blindness that Nancy Pelosi has regarding corporate profits. The article clearly states that Exxon/Mobile LOST money profits were down. This is what happens in a free economy and free enterprise system. They are not like the government and can just keep on printing money. No, they have to support infrastructure, employees, retirees, and various pension plans that have their money invested with the company. So to say to burn them out is to say to your fellow Americans, the hell with you too. So your rantings are not justified. At least these are real numbers from a real corporation, and not the numbers that the current administration trots out anyway they please
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