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BP hikes dividend after strong fourth quarter

BP hikes dividend after strong fourth quarter

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LONDON (AP) -- BP PLC has raised its quarterly dividend by 14 percent after posting double-digit gains in profit and revenue in the last three months of 2011 despite further big payments to compensate for the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

For the three months ending Dec. 31, BP reported a profit of $7.69 billion, up 38 percent from the $5.57 billion posted a year earlier. Revenue was up 15 percent at $96.3 billion.

Replacement cost profit, a closely watched industry measure, was 65 percent higher at $7.6 billion.

"2012 will be a year of increasing investment and milestones as we build on the foundations laid last year," said CEO Bob Dudley.

"As we move through 2013 and 2014, we expect financial momentum will build as we complete payments into the Gulf of Mexico Trust Fund, restore high-value production and bring new projects on stream."

The fund Dudley referred to is the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Trust, created in 2010 to pay victims of the spill. BP had paid $15.1 billion of the $20 billion it's supposed to put into the fund as of Dec. 31. The fund has paid out about $6.7 billion in claims.

For the full year, BP reported a profit of $39.8 billion compared to a loss of $3.7 billion in 2010; replacement cost profit was $23.9 billion compared with a loss of $4.9 billion in the previous year.

The hike in the quarterly dividend, to 8 cents per share, is the first increase since BP resumed paying dividends a year ago.

"The dividend is still far from the historical heady heights, however, whilst the ongoing fallout from the Gulf of Mexico spill is a distraction," said Richard Hunter, head of equities at Hargreaves Lansdown. "More positively, the fund put aside to finance these claims seems sufficient, whilst further planned divestments will enable BP to focus more strategically on higher growth opportunities."

BP shares were up 0.3 percent in early trading in London at 4.91 pounds.

"It was good to see a dividend increase with the results and it is a good sign of confidence in the improving operational performance," said Tony Shephard, analyst at Charles Stanley & Co., who rated the shares as "hold."

"BP's share valuation is low relative to the other oil and gas majors but it still faces uncertainty over the Gulf of Mexico tragedy."

BP faces its day in court in New Orleans on Feb. 27 with the opening of a limitation and liability trial over the spill.

BP PLC, rig owner Transocean Ltd. and cement contractor Halliburton Co. have been fighting each other over who was responsible for causing the blowout, which was finally halted in July 2010. U.S. investigators have said that BP bears ultimate responsibility for the spill, but has faulted all three companies to some degree.

"We continue to believe that BP will settle sooner rather than later given the U.S. presidential election and we see a 50 percent chance this will occur in the next few weeks," said Stuart Joyner, analyst at Investec Securities.

BP has reached settlements with some of its partners and contractors including $4 billion from Anadarko Petroleum Corp., which had a 25 percent stake in the well; $1.1 billion from MOEX, which had a 10 percent stake; and $75 million from Weatherford International Ltd. which supplied casing components.

"As I have said before, we are prepared to settle if we can do so on fair and reasonable terms, but equally, if this is not possible, we are preparing vigorously for trial," Dudley said.

BP says it currently has five deepwater rigs working on BP-operated fields in the Gulf of Mexico plus an appraisal well. It expects to have three more rigs working in the Gulf by the end of the year.

 

19 comments

  • Mikee  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    Ultimately, Oil price fluctuations are the result of market speculators who have no regard for anything except making profits for themselves and or thier parent company's. Subsequent economic fallout is often a secondary concern.
    I would suggest critical comodities such as oil and fuels be limitied to hedging actions by only those who use it, drill for it and store it for use and as in other critical comodities, be limited as to percentages of daily or weekly increase/decrease in price levels. This would help eliminate the arbitrage actions which create ridiculous price swings, negatively affecting us all.
  • Mikee  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    Seems to me, BP has absorbed much of the blame in which three other national and promanant contractors are just as, if not more, culpable for the blow out then was BP. Unfortunately, the buisness 'adict' of ' the buck stops here' has been applied to BP. BP has graciously..imo....provided billions in cash payments to several claimants (many of which were inflated and fraudulant...to be expected) including spending billions in a continued committed effort to restore environmental quality, despite the reality that only so much can be done to that end.

    The Gulf zone in question, has been the recipient of several other less extensive spills and lingering chronic pollution, such that unique and peresistant bacteria bio mass and resulting anoxic zones have developed causing indertermanent damage to local fisheries and formerly productive waters.

    BP is being blamed for 'damaging' an already comprimised marine environment. Surface visual conditions are often no indicator of the unseen damage being done below the surfrace both prior to and since the BP Horizon platform incident...for which BP is being blamed. I would hope that this fact would be brought up at upcomming trials for a more fair assessment of prior environmental conditions as to the local fisheries and water zones enlightening officials as to better evaluations of culpability.
  • Claw  •  3 months ago
    The story fails to say how much BP pays in income taxes.
    • sam 3 months ago
      Very little.
    • Paul 3 months ago
      Nothing.... British Petroleum - Do I need to emphsize the "British" part of that title?
    • Paul 3 months ago
      Their investors will have to pay 15% capital gains on their investment in Stocks but not until they sell it....
  • Dean  •  Plano, Texas  •  3 months ago
    And yet we still allow gasoline price robbery at the pump!
    • Steve Jackson 3 months ago
      Nonsense. You're free not to buy gasoline. I haven't bought a gallon of gasoline in 5 years. If you don't like the price, refuse to buy. Since I don't buy, that means it's possible not to buy; if it's possible not to buy, then your continuing to buy is a free choice. Robbery? Stop whining.
    • Langston Hughes 3 months ago
      Most of the cost of gas is in the form of federal taxes. You want to complain? Complain to your congressman or that POS in the white house.
    • Aleksandr 3 months ago
      Do you steal gasoline?
  • PD Gornall  •  3 months ago
    thats .48 dividend per U.S. BP (ADR) share, 1.92 per yr., 4% on pps, with eps after one-offs rolling in at more than 6.40 to better than triple future return
  • manhattan guy  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    they worry about oil in the gulf they should worry about all the free loaders trying to get something and what about all the folks who use the water in the gulf as a bathroom what a joke this is
    • sam 3 months ago
      You must mean BP.
    • James 3 months ago
      The fraudulent claims are disgusting. BP is about the only honest party in this whole thing.
  • Mr  •  Springfield, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    down to $95 a barrel, and gas at over 140 a barrel price. Thank the traders at wall street. We should build a Tomb Stone, the size of the great Pyramid, on it should be a name and picture of all the faces of the Traders and Oil Executives (along with there kids). With it reading; They destroyed all humanity with there greed.
  • Claw  •  3 months ago
    Almost 30 Billion in PROFIT last year, no problem. If you were a fisherman lost money because of the oil spill in the Gulf and want compensated-- BIG PROBLEM. BP says you should become a shareholder athen we will raise your investment by 14%. Where is Richard Cordray and the consumer protection agency NOW????????????
    • Paul 3 months ago
      Oh yeah, that's where the problem lays, uh? Couldn't be the republican congress protecting the oil industry and their rich croney investors, could it? No.... Has to be the new guy who couldn't be installed until a recess appointment made it possible.
  • cecebe_ont  •  Alexander City, Alabama  •  3 months ago
    And the government is still providing $$ to the oil companies..
    • James 3 months ago
      No they aren't. There are no subsidies to oil companies. Depletion allowance was ended decades ago except for very small independent companies and investment deduction credit is for all business, no different in the oil industry, and is a mechanism to reduce taxes in the year the investment is made and defer them until later tax years. Are you a trained seal because there is no truth to your comment. Oil companies pay billions of dollars in taxes every year. Lose that and life dims substantially.
  • qqzz  •  3 months ago
    Shamelessly, Yahoo doesn't let the truth be posted.
  • Willie  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  3 months ago
    greed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Hunter  •  3 months ago
    If Bush was president we would be saying he and his friends are taking advantage of us. Gas has been over $3.00 a gallon for two straight years and nobody says anything about it to Obama or Obama to the the oil companies.
  • bill  •  3 months ago
    Big Oil companies will never pay for there mistakes they make the consumer pay.Greed is a mental disorder a sin against ones neighbor and has spread like a virus among OPEC , Big OIL Investment Banks and Speculators these people are infected with Greed.
  • duke  •  Greenville, South Carolina  •  3 months ago
    BP is not paying .. we are at the pumps....FU BP
  • Fisherman  •  3 months ago
    FUQ BP
  • kenny  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    BP= BANDITO PETROLIUM
  • Mr  •  Springfield, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    In 2 months, after we flatten Iran and they come back and drive truck bombs into our refineries and pipelines, they will lose it all. I'm going to save one of my dirty socks that I've making tea with, so I can offer them a cup, and say Welcome to my world, the gutter!!! Then JAM A PAIR OF DIRTY UNDERWEAR DOWN THERE THROATS, and say HERE's LUNCH
  • Skipto  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    Gas should be $5 a gallon, taxed to the hilt and put the gas tax money into the military!

    God bless our troops!
  • Denisse  •  3 months ago
    From the comfort of your own home by learning to trade Gold you can infact make a lot of money. Visit “GoId Trading Academy.”
 
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