logo
Shell profits fall as trading hit by volatile markets

Shell profits fall as trading hit by volatile markets

Rhyl Journal4 days ago
The oil major told shareholders that adjusted earnings, or net profits, dropped by 30% to 9.84 billion US dollars (£7.4 billion) over the half-year, compared with a year earlier.
Nevertheless, profits in the second quarter of the year were ahead of analyst expectations.
Shell added that income attributable to shareholders was 23% lower, due to the effect of 'lower trading and optimisation margin' and decreasing energy prices.
The firm said it was also impacted by a charge of 509 million dollars (£383 million) related to the UK energy profits levy, which took place in the first quarter.
The FTSE 100 company, however, said it would continue to hand significant cash back to its shareholders.
It announced a 3.5 billion dollar (£2.6 billion) share buyback for the quarter.
Wael Sawan, chief executive of Shell, said: 'Shell generated robust cash flows reflecting strong operational performance in a less favourable macro environment.
'We continued to deliver on our strategy by enhancing our deep-water portfolio in Nigeria and Brazil, and achieved a key milestone by shipping the first cargo from LNG (liquified natural gas) Canada.
'Our continued focus on performance, discipline and simplification helped deliver 3.9 billion dollars (£2.9 billion) of structural cost reductions since 2022, with the majority delivered through non-portfolio actions.
'This focus enables us to commence another 3.5 billion dollars (£2.6 billion) of buybacks for the next three months, the 15th consecutive quarter of at least 3 billion dollars in buybacks.'
Derren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: 'Shell's second earnings hit a bit of an oil patch, with lower commodity prices, a weaker trading environment and unplanned downtime at its chemical plants all playing their part.
'Shell's balance sheet is one of its key strengths and investors could start to get nervous if debt continues to rise for any length of time.
'Nonetheless, management has ploughed on with a further buyback […] and there are some signs that financial performance could improve in the third quarter.'
Shares in the company moved 1.7% higher in early trading.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The shares that rocketed over the past decade - but which markets delivered most 'ten-baggers'?
The shares that rocketed over the past decade - but which markets delivered most 'ten-baggers'?

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

The shares that rocketed over the past decade - but which markets delivered most 'ten-baggers'?

The FTSE 100 has hit a series of record highs, surpassing 9,000 points for the first time in July, and then breaking through 9,100. Despite a slip-up at the end of last week, the FTSE 100 still closed at 9,067. Already, bulls will be setting their targets on the 10,000-point mark in the years to come. The FTSE 100 has grown by more than 10 per cent this year so far, while the FTSE 250 is up almost 7 per cent. The standout big name performer this year has been Rolls-Royce, with the engineer's shares up 78 per cent since the start of 2025 - and an astonishing 1,100 per cent over the past five years. Yet for investors looking strike it rich on a true gold mine stock over the long term, the UK might not be the place to look. Analysis from IG, shared exclusively with This is Money, suggests that investors hoping to find a 'ten-bagger' stock should be looking across the pond - where they are 22 times more likely to find a higher performer than in the UK. A ten-bagger is a stock that multiplies its value tenfold over a ten-year period, delivering a 1,000 per cent or higher gain. While Rolls-Royce has ten-bagged from its lows, just a single main market UK stock proved to be a ten-bagger over the decade-long period that IG looked at: Warhammer maker, Games Workshop. The firm returned 3,109 per cent during the period, according to IG analysis covering the S&P 500, Europe's Stoxx 600 and the UK's FTSE 350 over the ten years from the end of June 2015 to the end of June 2025, based on share price gains alone. The Nottingham-based firm, which only joined the ranks of the FTSE 100 in December last year, is something of an unlikely British success story. In June 2015, Games Workshop shares were worth around 500 pence each, having languished under the £10 market since the 1990s, before booming in the past decade. Games Workshop's impressive return places it as the ninth highest growing ten-bagger in the list. > How Games Workshop transformed into a miniature wargames giant Top 10 ten-bagger stocks, 2015-2025 Rank Company 10-year share price growth Geography 1 Nvidia Corp. 29,959% US 2 Advanced Micro Devices 5,524% US 3 Argenx SE 4,535% Europe 4 Rheinmetall AG 3,585% Europe 5 Evolution AB 3,167% Europe 6 Games Workshop Group PLC 3,109% Europe 7 Axon Enterprise Inc 2,237% US 8 Texas Pacific Land Corp 2,077% US 9 Fair Isaac Corp 1,913% US 10 Arista Networks 1,834% US Source: IG, data is across the FTSE 350, S&P 500 and Stoxx 600 How the US became the home of ten-baggers However, its growth still pales in comparison with US darling Nvidia, with the chipmaker and largest company in the world rising an eye-watering 29,959 per cent since 2015. The S&P 500 had 23 ten-baggers in total, including Advanced Micro Devices, rising 5,254 per cent, and Axon Enterprise, which increased 2,237 per cent. Other big US names like Tesla and Netflix also made it into the list. Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG, said: 'Every investor dreams of finding the next Apple or Nvidia - stocks that transform portfolios with tenfold returns. But those headline-grabbing success stories are far more common in the US than in the UK. 'While American markets boast the world's biggest tech giants, the FTSE 100 is still dominated by more traditional names which don't always fire the imagination in the same way.' Even mainland Europe far outweighs the UK, with 14 of the Stoxx 600 delivering tenfold returns over the decade. Dutch biotech firm Argenx SE grew 4,535 per cent over the period, while German defence frim Rheinmetall AG has risen 3,585 per cent since 2015. IG said Europe's ten-baggers are noticeably more diversified than the US' tech-heavy winners, although still mainly focused around tech and healthcare. Of course, IG's analysis only includes 350 UK stocks, compared to 600 for Europe and 500 for the US. Still, the UK's lag on high growth stocks comes amid continued concerns that London is no longer a competitive market, and fewer companies are choosing to bet on going public in the UK. This year so far, some 70 companies have left the UK market, while over recent years big names have fled the UK, with the likes of chipmaker Arm and gambling firm Flutter betting on the US, while most recently UK fintech Wise has said it plans to move its listing to New York. Beauchamp added: 'To change that, the UK needs to do more to attract and retain high-growth companies, particularly in tech and innovation. 'That means making London a more appealing place to list - and encouraging a shift in corporate culture, with more focus on long-term reinvestment and growth rather than just delivering dividends.'

Want to retire in your 50s? Here's how to plan for it
Want to retire in your 50s? Here's how to plan for it

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Want to retire in your 50s? Here's how to plan for it

Retiring in your 50s can seem like a pipe dream, particularly with the high costs of living and restrictions on accessing your pension until the age of 55 – rising to 57 in 2028. However, with careful planning and consistent saving, you can increase your chances of an early escape from working life. Start by working out how much income you will need in retirement. According to the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, a single person now needs about £31,700 a year for a moderate lifestyle, while a couple needs £43,900 between them. These figures cover the cost of running a car, an annual overseas holiday and an off-peak long weekend break in the UK. Early retirees often spend more at first, packing in travel and hobbies while they are still active. One way to guarantee an income for a set period, or the rest of your life, is to buy something called an annuity. In exchange for a lump sum, you get regular payments, but how big these are depend on your health and your age, and if you buy one in your 50s, you will get less each year than if you wait until you are older. According to the financial firm Hargreaves Lansdown, someone earning £26,000 a year and contributing the standard 8% (5% from their earnings and 3% from their employer) to their pension from age 22 to 68 could build a fund of about £235,000. This could generate an annuity income of about £16,000 a year in retirement on top of the state pension (now £11,973 a year). If they stopped making contributions and bought an annuity at age 57, their fund might be closer to £143,000 – reducing their annual income to about £8,000 before the state pension. To retire at 57 with a £16,000 income from a personal pension, they would probably need to contribute about 13% of their salary throughout their working life on top of the 3% employer contribution. 'Even for some very high earners, the pressures of mortgages, raising a family, supporting elderly parents and an elevated cost of living can make a retirement in the early 50s a tough ask,' says David Little of the wealth manager Evelyn Partners. 'With improved life expectancies, that might mean a 40-year retirement or more.' Building up pension savings early is vital if you want to finish work in your 50s. Under current rules, you can pay up to £60,000 a year into a pension, or up to 100% of your annual earnings, whichever is lower, and still benefit from tax relief. Even modest contributions snowball because every year's gains are reinvested and start earning their own returns. Check whether your employer will match any extra contributions you make or let you use salary sacrifice, as both will boost your pension savings. Salary sacrifice boosts your pension because it reduces your gross salary, meaning you and your employer pay less in national insurance. Some employers pass their NI saving on to your pension, too, which can increase the total contribution. One partner can boost another's future income by making contributions for them. Up to £3,600 a year can go into a pension for a non‑earner and still receive basic‑rate relief. (You do not have to be married/civil partnered). Because pensions are locked until at least age 55 (rising to 57 in 2028), many people planning for early retirement also save into an Isa. You can put up to £20,000 a year into an Isa and benefit from tax-free growth and withdrawals, giving you a ready‑made bridge between quitting work and tapping your pension. Historically, stocks and shares have typically produced much higher returns than cash. '£1,000 invested in a global tracker fund 20 years ago would have grown to more than £5,000 today,' says Dan Coatsworth, an investment analyst at the investment platform AJ Bell. 'The same amount in a cash Isa earning an average rate over the same time period would be worth about £1,500. 'Global equity funds are popular with people in their 20s, 30s and 40s as they offer broad exposure. You can choose low-cost passive options like the Fidelity Index World fund, which tracks more than 1,300 companies across developed markets, including big names like Microsoft and Apple.' The £5,000 figure mentioned is based on investments in a stocks and shares Isa, but the principle of long-term compounding applies to Isa and pension investments. As you approach your target retirement age, Coatsworth recommends shifting strategy. 'Once you're within five years of retiring, think about how your pension will be structured. That could mean moving some of your pot into income-generating assets and potentially dialling down risk.' Some pension providers will automatically gradually reduce investment risk as you get nearer to retirement through something known as 'lifestyling', but it is worth checking where your investments are held. Lifestyling usually starts anything between five and 15 years before retirement. However, your pension provider may need to be told your intended retirement age if it is earlier than the default age. Reducing your expenses can make retiring in your 50s more achievable. High-interest debts, particularly credit cards and loans, should be paid off as soon as possible. Downsizing your home or relocating somewhere cheaper could free up equity and reduce your outgoings, and reviewing bills, insurance and subscriptions could also reveal some easy savings. Even small reductions in spending can reduce the sum you need to live on each year, helping your money last longer. Retiring early means covering the years before the state pension kicks in. Helen Morrissey, the head of retirement analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown, says: 'The state pension age is on the way up – [it's] currently 66 and due to hit 68 by the mid-2040s. Given the important role that the state pension plays in people's retirement income, much more will need to be saved in the pension to bridge this gap.' The state pension is now just under £12,000 a year. 'If it increased by 2.5% per year over a period of 10 years, then that would be about £150,000 extra that would need to be saved into a pension to cover that period if you were looking to retire early,' Morrissey says. You need 35 qualifying years of NI contributions to receive the full amount. Beware that gaps in your NI record to raise children or care for others can mean you fall short of the 35 years needed for the full state pension. This is a particular risk if you are aiming to retire early, as you will have fewer working years to make up the shortfall. You can pay voluntary NI contributions to fill gaps in your record. You can take up to 25% of your pension pot tax-free from age 55 (rising to 57 from 2028). This is often taken as a lump sum, but you can also take it in stages. The rest of your pension withdrawals will be taxed as income. Some early retirees buy fixed-term annuities with part of their pension to provide a guaranteed income until state pension age – rates are more attractive now than in recent years. Little warns against cashing in the 25% tax-free pension lump sum too early: 'Taking it all at once in your 50s can deplete your pot quickly. Taking it in tranches makes it last longer.' Retirement plans don't need to be set in stone. Stock markets fluctuate, living costs rise, and plans change. Reviewing your savings annually can help you spot problems early and make adjustments. Most pension providers offer online tools to let you test different scenarios. If you are falling behind, you may need to boost your contributions. If your investments perform better than expected, you might gain extra flexibility. 'Early retirement is achievable, but it takes discipline and regular checks,' Morrissey says. 'It's worth setting a reminder to review your plans each year.'

Dollar finds footing after US jobs drubbing
Dollar finds footing after US jobs drubbing

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Dollar finds footing after US jobs drubbing

SINGAPORE, Aug 4 (Reuters) - A battered dollar found some support on Monday after a dismal U.S. jobs report and President Donald Trump's firing of a top labour official stunned investors and led them to ramp up bets of imminent Federal Reserve rate cuts. Data on Friday showed U.S. employment growth undershot expectations in July while the nonfarm payrolls count for the prior two months was revised down by a massive 258,000 jobs, suggesting a sharp deterioration in labour market conditions. Adding to headwinds for markets, Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Commissioner Erika McEntarfer the same day, accusing her of faking the jobs numbers. An unexpected resignation by Fed Governor Adriana Kugler also opened the door for Trump to make an imprint on the central bank much earlier than anticipated. Trump has been at loggerheads with the Fed for not lowering interest rates sooner. The barrage of developments dealt a one-two punch to the dollar, which sank more than 2% against the yen and roughly 1.5% against the euro on Friday. The greenback recovered some of its losses against the Japanese currency on Monday, last trading 0.2% higher at 147.67 yen . Still, it was down about 3 yen from its peak on Friday. The euro fell 0.06% to $1.1579 , while sterling was little changed at $1.3281. Trump said on Sunday he will announce a candidate to fill an open position at the Fed and a new BLS head in the next few days. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar edged up 0.1% to 98.75, after sliding more than 1% on Friday. "Market reactions to Friday night's events were swift and decisive," said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG. "Equities and the U.S. dollar tumbled, along with yields." The two-year Treasury yield fell to a three-month low of 3.6590% on Monday as traders heavily scaled up bets of a Fed cut in September, while the benchmark 10-year yield strayed not too far from a one-month low at 4.2493%. Markets are now pricing in a more than 90% chance the Fed will ease rates next month owing to the weaker-than-expected jobs data, with just under 60 basis points worth of cuts expected by December. "We pull forward our baseline call for a 25 bps cut from the FOMC to September," said David Doyle, head of economics at Macquarie Group. "While we don't see significant further weakness in the labour market, the results of this report are likely to shift the FOMC's assessment of the balance of risks to the outlook." In other currencies, the Australian dollar rose 0.09% to $0.64815, after rising 0.8% on Friday against a weaker greenback. The New Zealand dollar eased 0.11% to $0.59125. The Swiss franc weakened more than 0.1% to 0.8054 per dollar. Switzerland was left stunned on Friday after Trump hit the country with one of the highest tariffs in his global trade reset, with industry associations warning of tens of thousands of jobs being put at risk.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store