Special offer

Big Oil rakes in big bucks - At who's expense?

By
Real Estate Agent with Crye-Leike (Sango)

I guess it would be a good time to hold stock in the oil industry right?

When will we realize that the ‘oil crisis' in not a crisis,  but rather a scheme by the oil companies and lobbiest.  How many ‘RECORD PROFIT' quarters must  Americans endure before something is done?  Or is it simply the ‘American Way'?

 I have been screaming foul for over a year now - when the public first cried back three years ago, I was driving a diesel pickup - why you might ask?  Because diesel COSTS LESS TO PRODUCE and therefore was cheaper at the pump.  That was until the public outcry.  When this first erupted, many people did not see the bait and switch game that the oil companies did.

I saw it, as did any other diesel powered vehicle owner.  They simply switched the prices - worked for them.  They got the majority of consumers who were fixated on UNLEADED gas prices to quiet.  All the while socking it to the truckers who, oh by the way, transport your food, clothing and other necessities to the stores.  Of course this was blamed on ‘New Refinery Standard' and ‘Heating Oil demand'  - BULL - it is called gouging the public through higher costs of goods.

Our government rattles sabers, but what have they really done to investigate or stop this?  Speculators you say?  Are the speculators posting 11.7 BILLION dollar quarterly profits (Yep, that would be 3 months)? 

Think about it. 

From today's paper:

 

Exxon Mobil posts record-breaking $11.7 billion profit

  

HOUSTON - Exxon Mobil reported the fattest operating profit in U.S. corporate history Thursday but took a beating anyway - from politicians railing against Big Oil, drivers bleeding cash at the pump and investors who expected more.

The world's largest publicly traded oil company turned a profit of $11.7 billion for the second quarter, lifted mostly by meteoric crude prices. Its earnings were up 14 percent from a year ago.

Total sales: $138 billion - roughly the gross domestic product of Hungary.

Henry Hubble, Exxon Mobil's vice president for investor relations, said the record profits "highlight the quality of our integrated business model and disciplined investment approach."

For the most part, the plaudits ended there.

Despite their heft, Exxon's profits were a disappointment on Wall Street, and the company's stock slumped nearly 5 percent. Almost the entire energy industry was walloped by investors Thursday.

European rival Royal Dutch Shell posted its own record profit across the Atlantic, with earnings of $11.6 billion. Its American depository receipts tumbled nearly 4 percent in afternoon trading.

Growing investor apprehension can be found at the heart of what the oil industry does - finding and producing oil and natural gas.

Exxon Mobil's overall output fell 8 percent in the second quarter from a year ago - a significant blow for a company that generates more than two-thirds of its earnings from oil and gas production.

For Exxon Mobil, which produces 3 percent of the world's oil, finding new deposits of hydrocarbons is getting harder and harder.

State-run oil companies like those in Saudi Arabia and Venezuela control about 80 percent of known global oil reserves.

It's difficult if not impossible for Exxon and its competitors to get any part of that oil.

"It all comes down to production," said Brian Youngberg, an analyst with financial services firm Edward Jones. "This is the second straight quarter production came in below expectations. Investors are going to be questioning when they can turn that around."

Backlash

Exxon Mobil was not alone in the industry in posting massive profits over the past week. The reward? A broadening backlash from a public that is getting squeezed on fuel prices from every front.

Unleaded gas cost $3.74 per gallon at a Mobil station in Milwaukee, where Jeff and Jennine Pynn of Putnam Valley, N.Y., stopped Thursday during a 10-day road trip.

"It's totally unfair," Jennine Pynn said as she pumped $47 worth into a Toyota Highlander. "You really hope to see them not turn so much of a profit."

Dan Owens of Muskego, Wis., drives about 100 miles a day as a sales representative for a packaging firm. He called Big Oil's profits "obscene."

"I'm all for making a profit - it's the American way. But it's another thing to gouge," said Owens, 38, shaking his head. "It makes me feel like I'm getting ripped off."

Exploration

While the oil companies insist they're trying to find new oil that might bring down gas prices, the money they spend on exploration pales compared with what they've spent in recent years on stock buybacks and dividends.

In the most recent quarter, Exxon Mobil said it spent $8 billion buying back stock, versus $7 billion on capital and exploration expenditures.

The company has said it expects to spend $25 billion to $30 billion on capital and exploration projects each of the next five years.

In a letter to the five largest international oil companies released Thursday, some House and Senate Democrats demanded the companies spend more of their profits on U.S. production and renewable energy and less buying back their own stock.

"Given today's strong market incentive for expanding exploration and production, we can only believe that reinvesting your vast profits into the production of more oil and natural gas in the United States is a profitable strategy that will help our country decrease its dependence on foreign oil," said the letter from Sens. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Robert Menendez, D-N.J., and Reps. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., and Ed Markey, D-Mass.

Earnings out of line?

The American Petroleum Institute, the industry's trade association, said Big Oil earnings are not out of line compared with earnings in other industrial sectors.

For example, the institute notes, Exxon's earnings amount to about 8.5 cents per dollar of sales, versus 11.6 cents for the companies making up the Dow Jones industrials.

"The oil and natural gas industry is massive because it has to be to effectively compete for global energy resources," said John Felmy, the API's chief economist.

"The industry's earnings make possible the huge investments necessary to help ensure America's future energy needs are met."

He noted about two-fifths of publicly traded oil and gas company stock is owned by tens of millions of investors through retirement accounts and pensions.

The entire industry is not rolling in cash. Refiners, including Exxon Mobil, must also buy crude.

The company's earnings from refining and marketing fell 54 percent in the quarter to $1.55 billion.

Profits for Marathon Oil Corp., also reported Thursday, fell roughly 50 percent.

The company said it may split itself in two, with one company focused primarily on exploration and production and the other on refining and marketing.

Exxon shares fell 4.7 percent, or $3.95, to $80.43. After Marathon announced it may split off its refining operations, its shares jumped 9.6 percent, or $4.34, to $49.47.

AP Writer Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

 

Posted by

Regards

Tim and Pam Cash
Crye-Leike Realtors
931-648-2112 (office)
931-338-1375 (cell)


The Cash Team - Making dreams come true one home at a time. Proudly serving the citizens of Clarksville and the Soldiers of Fort Campbell. To view available Clarksville properties, please visit our website at www.cashsofclarksville.com or email us at thecashteam@cashsofclarksville.comand we will run a custom search for you. Finding you and yours the perfect property in Clarksville Tennessee and surrounding areas is our goal.

Comments(3)

Steve Hoffacker
Steve Hoffacker LLC - West Palm Beach, FL
Certified Aging In Place Specialist-Instructor

Tim and Pam.

While I'm one of the first to complain about high gas prices - because I know that a lot of government regulation and taxes are at the root of much of it - the large profits that oil companies are recording are not just "piggy bank" profits where this is kept money. They use this money for exploration and expansion, among other things. Maybe the profits are large by other standards, but then they are operating a huge international business as well. I'm not defending the oil companies, just adding a perspective.

Steve

Aug 01, 2008 01:30 AM
Roland Woodworth
Blue Cord Realty - Clarksville, TN
Blue Cord Realty

Got to love the thought that the BIG OIL guys are getting RICH and the General Public is going BROKE each day

Aug 01, 2008 11:01 AM
Tim and Pam Cash
Crye-Leike (Sango) - Clarksville, TN
Real Estate Professionals - Clarksville TN

Steve, I beg to differ with you.  In the article they state that they used 8 billion to buy back stock and only 7 billion toward exploration - and that has not even begun.  Again, if I was a stock holder, I would probably be doing a happy dance.

Aug 01, 2008 11:20 AM