- Geopolitical Concerns Keep Oil Supported near $144
- South Korea Won Jumps on Intervention Warning
- Asian Markets Are Mixed, Shanghai Leads
- Will Smith Tops Box Office with 'Hancock'
- NBC Universal to Buy The Weather Channel
- Merrill Will Decide on BlackRock Stake Sale Soon
- For Stocks, Escaping Bear Hinges on Oil, GE
- Bush Backs Strong Dollar Policy
- Merrill May Be Close to Selling Bloomberg Stake: Report
- The Week: Pickers Focus on Steel, Financials, Tech & International Stocks
- Bowyer: Back to Monarchy in Land Rights?
- Parking Cash in European Telecoms
- Bargain Stocks: Nokia, Spectra, Incitex Pivot
- Sticker Shock: Fast Money's Inflation Special
- Our Favorite Inflation Trades
- Warren Buffett's Annual Stock Gift to Gates Foundation Worth $1.8B This Year
- That '70's Trade
- The Villain Of Our Story
British oil major BP beat forecasts on Tuesday with a 48 percent leap in first-quarter replacement cost (RC) net income, helped by record oil prices and strong profits from punting energy markets.
![]() |
AP |
Excluding non-operating items, which amounted to a net gain of $96 million, the RC result, which strips out the impact of changes in the value of fuel inventories, was $6.49 billion.
A Reuters poll of analysts gave an average forecast of $5.31 billion for BP's first quarter RC earnings, excluding non-ops.
The oil major said production averaged 3.913 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) in the first three months of the year, flat on the same period last year and in line with analysts' forecasts.
Output would have risen 5 percent, BP said, if it were not for the production sharing contracts it has with resource-holders, which reduce the amount of oil BP receives from projects when oil prices rise.
BP's refining and marketing division turned in an unexpected profit, despite lower crude processing margins and lower throughputs at its refineries.
Many analysts had expected a loss.
BP is undergoing a restructuring to simplify its corporate structure and cut costs, in an effort to address industry-lagging operational performance and falling output.
A BP spokesman cautioned that the strong first-quarter earnings did not necessarily represent BP's return to form, saying the results were flattered by a number of unusual items including BP's oil and gas traders having a lucky quarter.
"All the trading activity has gone in our favor in this quarter. This has probably contributed $400 million above a typical result," he said.
A deferral of tax charges in Russia also boosted the bottom line by around $200 million while corporate overheads also took a $250 million dip which is unlikely to be repeated, the spokesman said.





