Exxon Mobil Thank You Card

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  • pavyracer
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 04-12-07
    • 82839

    #1
    Exxon Mobil Thank You Card


    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Exxon Mobil made history on Friday by reporting the highest quarterly and annual profits ever for a U.S. company, boosted in large part by soaring crude prices.

    Exxon, the world's largest publicly traded oil company, said fourth-quarter net income rose 14% to $11.66 billion, or $2.13 per share. The company earned $10.25 billion, or $1.76 per share, in the year-ago period.

    The profit topped Exxon's previous quarterly record of $10.7 billion, set in the fourth quarter of 2005, which also was an all-time high for a U.S. corporation.

    "Exxon can put out some amazing numbers and this is one of those cases," said Jason Gammel, senior analyst at Macquarie Securities in New York.

    Exxon also set an annual profit record by earning $40.61 billion last year - or nearly $1,300 per second in 2007. That exceeded its previous record of $39.5 billion in 2006.

    In the fourth quarter, the company said revenue rose 29.5% from a year ago to $116.64 billion.

    Analysts were looking for the company to report quarterly profit of $10.36 billion on revenue of $114.9 billion, according to earnings tracker Thomson Financial.

    Despite topping Wall Street's estimates, Exxon (XOM, Fortune 500) shares slipped in afternoon trading.

    The company reported strong results in its worldwide exploration and production, or "upstream," business. Profit rose 32% to $8.2 billion during the quarter, offsetting some weakness earlier in the year.

    Income in Exxon's refining, or "downstream," business rose 15.7% during the quarter to $2.27 billion.

    Exxon attributed its impressive results to strong performance across its divisions, but a large part of the profit surge was underpinned by climbing oil prices.

    Crude prices skyrocketed nearly 60% last year. The surge helped prices break through the $100 a barrel mark for the first time ever early last month. Since crossing that milestone, prices have eased to around $90 a barrel.

    Natural gas prices also jumped last year, albeit marginally. But costs have also increased for the oil companies, which is why profits haven't risen as rapidly as crude prices.

    Big oil companies that both pump oil and refine crude into gasoline have to spend more for crude but are unable to pass on all the extra cost to consumers, which eats in to gasoline profit margins.

    The average price for a gallon of regular gasoline hit an all-time high of $3.23 in May, according to the motorist organization AAA. The high prices were blamed on strong demand and a series of accidents that shut down refineries in the U.S. But slack demand for gasoline in the latter half of last year kept gas prices from rising as dramatically as crude prices.

    Exxon's record results, which coincide with smaller rival Chevron's (CVX, Fortune 500) profit jump, drew some fire from both government officials and consumer rights groups, who have argued previously that the the oil industry is deliberately restricting supply and profiting on the back of U.S. motorists.

    Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. took a swipe at the two firms, calling on fellow lawmakers to break the country's dependence on foreign oil and rollback unnecessary tax incentives for oil companies.

    Judy Dugan, research director of The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, urged Congress to initiate some oversight into unregulated energy trading markets, which have been accused of helping to drive up the price of oil.

    "Exxon is happy to take advantage of these prices," said Dugan.

    But finding oil has also become more costly. The oil boom has led to a surge in exploration and drilling activity, which has pushed up the price for skilled workers and equipment.

    Furthermore, new supplies of oil are increasingly difficult to find and generally tend to be located in harder to reach - and hence more expensive - places. The new natural gas field discovered this week by Brazil's Petrobras lies three miles under the ocean.

    ExxonMobil representatives also stressed the cyclical nature of the business and noted that growing global demand for energy will require companies to heavily invest in future growth. The company said it estimates that global demand will grow by 30 percent by 2030.

    "The challenge for all of us in the industry is how to we meet that increased demand," said Henry Hubble, vice president of investor relations.

    Exxon and Chevron aren't the only two oil giants to report impressive earnings recently. Conoco (COP, Fortune 500), the nation's third-largest oil company, trounced profit estimates by nearly 25% when it reported last week. And Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Europe's largest oil company, reported a 60% increase in profits Thursday.
  • tblues2005
    SBR Hall of Famer
    • 07-30-06
    • 9235

    #2
    That is why we are headed into a recession probably because everyone don't have any money left after buying gasoline for the car.
    Comment
    • pavyracer
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 04-12-07
      • 82839

      #3
      Originally posted by tblues2005
      That is why we are headed into a recession probably because everyone don't have any money left after buying gasoline for the car.
      You are a wise man my friend! Bush and friends though are heading into early retirement so our troubles wouldn't matter for them at all.
      Comment
      • tblues2005
        SBR Hall of Famer
        • 07-30-06
        • 9235

        #4
        pavyracer,

        Thank god Bush is out in less than a year and then finally this country may get back on track and there is plenty of work to be done. They don't seem to even care about the people, they just care about the big oil industry relatives are in. I think it is sick.
        Comment
        • capitalist pig
          SBR MVP
          • 01-25-07
          • 4998

          #5
          Give me a break, if we didnt have such a thirst for oil/gas there wouldnt be so called problems. Ive owned XOM since it was just Exxon, and I remember when the damn stock was selling for $8 a share. The oil companies have gone through terrible years untill the last decade, and now they finally get things moving for us shareholders and everyone hates them.

          Im a proud owner of XOM and have owned it for over 2 decades and have made a small fortune from it the last 10 years. Thankyou XOM, and keep up the good work.
          later
          Comment
          • pavyracer
            SBR Aristocracy
            • 04-12-07
            • 82839

            #6
            Can you imagine if this happened in some other country, let’s say France. For example, let’s assume the next president of France gets elected by the biggest wine producers of France and a couple of years after he is elected the price of wine goes from $20 a bottle to $90 per bottle. Do you think that the French, which I don’t really care for, will elect him again as their President for four more years? I don’t think so…
            Comment
            • pavyracer
              SBR Aristocracy
              • 04-12-07
              • 82839

              #7
              Originally posted by capitalist pig
              Give me a break, if we didnt have such a thirst for oil/gas there wouldnt be so called problems. Ive owned XOM since it was just Exxon, and I remember when the damn stock was selling for $8 a share. The oil companies have gone through terrible years untill the last decade, and now they finally get things moving for us shareholders and everyone hates them.

              Im a proud owner of XOM and have owned it for over 2 decades and have made a small fortune from it the last 10 years. Thankyou XOM, and keep up the good work.
              later
              Let me know how I can donate to the poor support fund of Exxon. With such hard times it must be difficult to stay in business.
              Comment
              • RageWizard
                SBR MVP
                • 09-01-06
                • 3008

                #8
                Alot of Exxon's profits are a reflection of the weak dollar. Opec is now considering selling oil in Euros because the dollar is so low.
                Comment
                • pavyracer
                  SBR Aristocracy
                  • 04-12-07
                  • 82839

                  #9
                  Originally posted by RageWizard
                  Alot of Exxon's profits are a reflection of the weak dollar. Opec is now considering selling oil in Euros because the dollar is so low.
                  Are you implying that if the dollar was stronger, let's assume it was trading euro one for one, Exxon's profits would have been less? I'm not following you here.
                  Comment
                  • RageWizard
                    SBR MVP
                    • 09-01-06
                    • 3008

                    #10
                    Exxon's profits are set at about the same level or percentage for each barrel of oil that they sell. Oil prices are inflated now because the dollar is weak. So there is seemingly more profits but in reality it is the same percentage as before. It just looks like they made records. When you adjust for dollar value, its just a little higher than usual. Of course they sell more oil every day than they sold the day before also.
                    Comment
                    • Poker_Beast
                      SBR Hall of Famer
                      • 09-14-06
                      • 6545

                      #11
                      Screw the oil companies they are just exploiting us. They poor guy that owns a station can't charge more that 10 cents profit or they get fined for gouging but the fuking oil companies can make billions.

                      Bullshit!!!!!!!
                      Comment
                      • rugbybdyb
                        SBR Wise Guy
                        • 09-06-07
                        • 997

                        #12
                        Originally posted by pavyracer
                        Can you imagine if this happened in some other country, let’s say France. For example, let’s assume the next president of France gets elected by the biggest wine producers of France and a couple of years after he is elected the price of wine goes from $20 a bottle to $90 per bottle. Do you think that the French, which I don’t really care for, will elect him again as their President for four more years? I don’t think so…

                        Not a good comparison, wine is not necessary for people to go on with life, on top of that there are many diff wine producers that will provide the product cheaper and if all wine went through the roof there are plenty of alternatives, with gas we all have to use it or we cant make money and all the gas companies have us by the balls...

                        We cant blame this on government etc....we have to look at ourselves we constantly go buy SUV and gas guzzlers(I have one) this drives the demand for the product up and in turn raises the prices.....The price for gas in europe has been where it is for us in the USA forever so we are just catching up to them.....You cant base your political decision or blame one person for a price that is being driven up by consumers.
                        Comment
                        • pavyracer
                          SBR Aristocracy
                          • 04-12-07
                          • 82839

                          #13
                          Originally posted by rugbybdyb
                          Not a good comparison, wine is not necessary for people to go on with life, on top of that there are many diff wine producers that will provide the product cheaper and if all wine went through the roof there are plenty of alternatives, with gas we all have to use it or we cant make money and all the gas companies have us by the balls...

                          We cant blame this on government etc....we have to look at ourselves we constantly go buy SUV and gas guzzlers(I have one) this drives the demand for the product up and in turn raises the prices.....The price for gas in europe has been where it is for us in the USA forever so we are just catching up to them.....You cant base your political decision or blame one person for a price that is being driven up by consumers.
                          Creating a false impression that the country is under attack and the need for going to war on false information helped also raise the price of oil. If for demand only the price would have topped at $50 per barrell which never climbed above that in Clinton's non-war years. The Bush administration is responsible for the price of oil jumping from $50 to $100. The jump from $25 to $50 was expected due to the demand and economic growth wordwide.

                          In Europe the gas was expensive before, up to $6 a gallon because it is taxed. They have chosen in Europe to have less income tax but more consumer spending tax to encourage conservation. Every single policy that the Bush administration enacted is based on driving the price of oil up by encouraging overconsumption and non-conservation. Biggest example of this flawed policy what Bush's brilliant idea to give small business owners that buy SUV's a tax break if they used it for business purposes instead of forcing the car makers to make more fuel efficient cars like the congress wanted. I can list you many other policies that he enacted to encourage over-consumption and drive the price of oil up for his Saudi buddies and his Halleburton partners in crime.
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