From 1h ago
Profits have soared at British Gas’s parent company too, thanks to higher revenues from its oil, gas and nuclear assets, and the surge in commodity prices.
Centrica has reported adjusted operating profits of $1.34bn for the first half of this year, up from ?262m in January-June 2021.
The increase in adjusted operating profit was primarily driven by the Upstream businesses, reflecting strong production and generation volumes and the impact of higher commodity prices.
Additionally, Energy Marketing & Trading managed the more volatile commodity price environment well and delivered higher adjusted operating profit
Centrica has reinstated its dividend, which it suspended after the Covid-19 pandemic began in 2020.
Chief executive Chris O’Shea says we are facing the most challenging energy crisis in living memory:
We’ve made significant progress de-risking the Group and building a stronger business for the benefit of all stakeholders.
This strength has allowed us to lead the industry in measures to protect and support customers through the most challenging energy crisis in living memory and the benefit of our balanced portfolio can be seen in our first half performance. We expect this to continue into the second half, underpinning continued investment in customer service and elsewhere in our portfolio.
Centrica was also boosted by asset sales, having sold Spirit Energy’s Norwegian and Statfjord UK oil and gas assets this year ( but did make a statutory loss of ?1bn due to accounting remeasurements).
Centrica insists it is “very aware” of the impact of soaring bills and wider inflationary pressures on customers, and is investing over ?100m in customer service, support and pricing over 2022.
British Gas Energy is also hiring 500 more customer service staff to handle higher call volumes from customers struggling to pay their bills.
Drinks giant Diageo is celebrating a surge in sales as hospitality firms reopened after pandemic lockdowns, and more people sampled expensive spirits.
Diageo’s net sales jumped up 21% in the year to 30 June, to almost ?15.5bn.
This growth was due to continued recovery in sale to bars and restaurance, along with “resilient demand” from consumers buying drinks in shops and off-licences despite inflationary pressures.
Diageo also raised prices by “mid-single digits”, and benefitted from a shift to pricier spirits.
Diageo makes Johnnie Walker whiskey, Don Julio tequila, Smirnoff vodka and and Captain Morgan rum. It saw strong growth in “super-premium-plus brands, particularly scotch, tequila and Chinese white spirits”.
Ivan Menezes, Diageo’s chief executive, explains:
In a year of significant global supply chain disruption, our double-digit volume growth demonstrates the tremendous agility and resourcefulness of our teams. Our net sales growth was across categories.
We benefitted from the on-trade recovery, continued global premiumisation trends, with our super-premium-plus brands up 31%, and from price increases across our regions. I am particularly proud of the performance of Johnnie Walker, which delivered double-digit growth across all regions to surpass 21 million cases globally
British medical products maker Smith+Nephew has warned that inflation is eating into its profits, sending its shares sliding 10%.
Smith+Nephew makes hip and knee replacements and advanced wound treatments.
The FTSE 100-listed company told the City that annual profit margins will fall this year, due to continued surge in inflation and supply chain challenges.
In an extremely busy morning for corporate news, Barclays has revealed a 40% slump in profits after putting aside ?1.5bn to cover a US trading blunder and potential customer loan defaults.
Pre-tax profits tumbled between April and June – from ?2.5bn a year earlier to ?1.5bn – falling short of the analysts’ consensus forecast of ?1.6bn.
The lender was knocked by a jump in conduct costs, which surged to ?1.3bn from ?143m a year earlier, after it was forced to start the process of buying back US securities that it had not been authorised to sell.
Some of that money has been put aside to deal with the potential fine expected to be levied by US regulators over the error.
Here’s the full story:
Consumer goods giant Nestl? has joined rivals such as Unilever, Reckitt Benckiser and Heinz Kraft by hiking its prices, boosting sales despite the cost of living squeeze.
The Kit-Kat-to-pet food manufacturer raised its prices by 6.5% in the first half of this year. Sales volumes grew 1.7%, as customers continued to buy products such as Purina pet food and coffee at those higher prices.
Nestl? has now lifted its sales forecasts for the year to 7-8%, from 5%, as demand for pricier branded goods holds up.
But it also saw operating profit margins dip, due to rising input costs such as more expensive ingredients.
France’s TotalEnergies has also reported record earnings, on the back of soaring crude oil and gas prices, and soaring demand for natural gas in Europe.
Second-quarter adjusted net income rose to $9.8bnfrom $3.46bn a year earlier, beating the analysts’ estimates.
TotalEnergies, like Shell, is extending its share buyback programme into the third quarte of the year, meaning investors will continue to benefit from the energy price crunch.
The National Grid is warning today that the UK energy market faces “risks and uncertainties this winter”, due to the squeeze on Europe’s gas reserves as Russia limits supplies.
But National Grid also believes the lights will stay on, as my colleague Rob Davies explains:
Coal power plants could be paid to generate more electricity, with consumers and businesses paid to use less, as the UK hunkers down for a winter of gas shortfalls across Europe caused by the standoff with Russia over the war in Ukraine.
In its early outlook forecasting Britain’s ability to keep the lights on over winter, the National Grid admitted there could be “tight periods” in early December, which would trigger a call for power plants to ramp up generation.
While the grid expects to be able to maintain the buffer that prevents blackouts, it issued a warning about the potential impact of a shortfall in Russian gas supply into Europe.
Centrica’s British Gas division has added over 200,000 customers so far this year, as the energy crisis forced some rivals went out of business.
Residential energy customers rose to 7.464m at the end of June, from 7.26m a year ago.
That includes 158,000 new accounts from Together Energy, who were switched to British Gas in January after Together collapsed.
Another 46,000 customers moved to British Gas during the period, even though the current price cap is the cheapest deal on the market (so there’s less incentive for customers to switch).
British Gas Energy has also set aside anoter ?63m to cover bad debts, recognising that more customers will struggle to pay their bills – with the price cap set to jump in October, and again in January.
Profits have soared at British Gas’s parent company too, thanks to higher revenues from its oil, gas and nuclear assets, and the surge in commodity prices.
Centrica has reported adjusted operating profits of $1.34bn for the first half of this year, up from ?262m in January-June 2021.
The increase in adjusted operating profit was primarily driven by the Upstream businesses, reflecting strong production and generation volumes and the impact of higher commodity prices.
Additionally, Energy Marketing & Trading managed the more volatile commodity price environment well and delivered higher adjusted operating profit
Centrica has reinstated its dividend, which it suspended after the Covid-19 pandemic began in 2020.
Chief executive Chris O’Shea says we are facing the most challenging energy crisis in living memory:
We’ve made significant progress de-risking the Group and building a stronger business for the benefit of all stakeholders.
This strength has allowed us to lead the industry in measures to protect and support customers through the most challenging energy crisis in living memory and the benefit of our balanced portfolio can be seen in our first half performance. We expect this to continue into the second half, underpinning continued investment in customer service and elsewhere in our portfolio.
Centrica was also boosted by asset sales, having sold Spirit Energy’s Norwegian and Statfjord UK oil and gas assets this year ( but did make a statutory loss of ?1bn due to accounting remeasurements).
Centrica insists it is “very aware” of the impact of soaring bills and wider inflationary pressures on customers, and is investing over ?100m in customer service, support and pricing over 2022.
British Gas Energy is also hiring 500 more customer service staff to handle higher call volumes from customers struggling to pay their bills.
Here’s some early analysis of Shell’s results, from Stuart Lamont, investment manager at Brewin Dolphin:
“The strong oil price backdrop has helped Shell deliver a blockbuster set of results. The dividend may have remained the same, but the share buyback programme is positive news for shareholders.
Many investors questioned the well-known ‘never sell Shell’ mantra during the worst of the pandemic and the company’s subsequent dividend cut, but with a path to net zero and attractive returns Shell is in a strong position – albeit, political risk remains high as elevated energy costs hit households.”
Shares in Shell have risen almost 1% in early trading, to a three-week high, after it beat profit forecasts.
So far this year, Shell’s shares have surged over 30%.
Shell’s refining profit margins almost tripled in the last quarter, to $28 per barrel of oil.
That’s up from a refining margin of $10 per barrel in the first three months of this year.
Shell says these higher refining margins reflect “the dislocation in product markets, particularly middle distillates”.
Middle distillates are refined from crude oil, and include heating oil, diesel and jet fuel.
Fuel retailers have blamed profiteering by refining companies for the record prices on forecourts this year. And earlier this month, the UK’s competition watchdog raised concerns over the margins made by refineries.
Here’s Reuters take on Shell’s results:
Refining profit margins tripled in the quarter to $28 per barrel.
They have weakened substantially in recent weeks amid signs of easing gasoline demand in the United States and Asia.
Shell said its refinery utilization would increase to 90-98% in the third quarter, compared with 84% in the second quarter.
Shell’s integrated gas division made adjusted earnings of $3.75bn in the last quarter, more than double the $1.6bn in Q2 2021.
That’s slightly lower than the January-March quarter, when the division – which includes liquefied natural gas (LNG) – made $4bn.
Shell says gas earnings this year were boosted by “higher realised prices and higher trading and optimisation results”.
Shell says it distributed a total of $7.4bn to its shareholders in the last quarter.
It will pay a dividend of $0.25 per share for Q2, which will be worth around $1.8bn to its investors, I think.
But it has also conducted an $8.5bn share buyback programme during 2022 (which pushes up its share price), and will conduct a new $6bn programme this quarter.
Given the current energy sector outlook, Shell says, shareholder distributions are expected to remain “in excess of 30% of cash flow from operating activities”.
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the world economy and the financial markets.
Oil giant Shell has doubled its profits in the last quarter, thanks to the surge in energy prices since the Ukraine war began which are hammering households and businesses.
Shell has reported record adjusted earnings of $11.47bn (?9.4bn) for the last quarter, up from $5.5bn in April-June 2021, as it benefitted from higher realised prices, higher refining margins, and stronger gas and power trading.
That smashes Shell’s record quarterly profit of $9.1bn racked up in January-March, and above analyst forecasts.
Shell says it made a “strong performance in a turbulent economic environment”.
Shell’s chief executive officer, Ben van Beurden, says:
“With volatile energy markets and the ongoing need for action to tackle climate change, 2022 continues to present huge challenges for consumers, governments, and companies alike.
Consequently, we are using our financial strength to invest in secure energy supplies which the world needs today, taking real, bold steps to cut carbon emissions, and transforming our company for a low-carbon energy future.
But the company will also funnel more cash to investors, announcing a share buyback programme of $6bn in the third quarter.
And with gas prices at their highest level since the Ukraine war began, the UK’s energy price cap could hit ?3,850 per year in January.
BFY Group, a utilities consultancy, warns that more vulnerable households, on prepayment meters, could see energy bills of ?500 for the month of January alone.
Consumers were also warned that annual charges of more than ?3,500 a year, or ?300 a month, could become the norm “well into 2024”.
The grim forecasts came a day after MPs said millions of people would fall into “unmanageable debt” without more government help to pay bills, following a surge in wholesale gas prices to near-record levels.
Also coming up today
We find out today if the world’s largest economy is shrinking. when US GDP for the second quarter is released.
Some analysts predict US economic activity fell for the second quarter in a row, which would be a technical recession.
European stock markets are expected to rise, despite the US central bank announcing another hefty interest rate rise last night.
The Federal Reserve made its second 0.75 percentage-point rise in a row, as it rattles through its most aggressive cycle of monetary tightening since 1981, but it also suggested it could slow the pace of increases, if inflation eases.
The agenda
9.30am BST: Weekly UK economic and business activity data
10am BST: Eurozone economic, business and consumer confidence report
1pm BST: German inflation rate for July
1.30pm BST: US Q2 GDP report
1.30pm BST: US weekly jobless