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    Equinor beats first quarter forecast on strong energy trading

Summary

Norway's Equinor beat first quarter profit expectations on Thursday, driven by strong results in energy trading, although earnings were well below last year's record amid a sharp fall in natural gas prices.

by: Reuters

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Complimentary, NGW News Alert, Natural Gas & LNG News, Europe, News By Country, Norway

Equinor beats first quarter forecast on strong energy trading

May 4 (Reuters) - Norway's Equinor beat first quarter profit expectations on Thursday, driven by strong results in energy trading, although earnings were well below last year's record amid a sharp fall in natural gas prices.

The oil and gas producer's adjusted profit before interest and tax for January-March fell to $12 billion from $18 billion a year earlier, but beat the $11.2 billion predicted in a poll of 26 analysts compiled by Equinor.

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"Equinor delivered strong earnings and cash flow across the business and remains a safe and reliable provider of energy to Europe," Chief Executive Anders Opedal said in a statement.

The company maintained its guidance for production and capital expenditure and kept its dividend unchanged.

Equinor's adjusted operating profit for the January-March period was also down from $15.1 billion in the fourth quarter.

The majority state-owned company last year became Europe's largest supplier of natural gas as Russia's Gazprom cut deliveries in response to the West's support for Ukraine, sending European gas prices to all-time highs.

All major Equinor units outperformed expectations in the first quarter, although the key driver was 'very strong' trading profits in its so-called midstream division (MMP) across oil and gas, RBC analyst Biraj Borkhataria said in a note to clients.

The MMP unit swung to a pretax profit of $1.28 billion from a year-ago loss of $92 million, beating an average analyst forecast for earnings of $986 million, Equinor's report showed.

Equinor said its average gas sales price to Europe had declined by 37% year-on-year in the first quarter while the price of oil was down by 24%.

The group's oil and gas production stood at 2.13 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boed) in the first quarter, slightly up from 2.1 million a year earlier as a ramp-up at fields such as Johan Sverdrup Phase 2 and Snoehvit in Norway, as well as Peregrino in Brazil, compensated for depletion elsewhere.

Gas volumes were up 1% year-on-year and represented more than 55% of the total production, "contributing to European energy security", the company said.

Equinor's full-year adjusted operating profit surged to a record $74.9 billion in 2022, more than doubling from the previous high in 2008.

Equinor's share price is down 16.6% year-to-date, underperforming a 4.2% decline in European petroleum stocks . (Reporting by Nerijus Adomaitis and Nora Buli, editing by Terje Solsvik, Gwladys Fouche and Susan Fenton)