Schlumberger: Drilling slowdown, prices hit 4Q

Schlumberger says drilling slowdown, prices will hit 4th-qtr profit by 5 to 7 cents per share

HOUSTON (AP) -- Schlumberger Ltd. said Friday that drilling slowdowns and price cuts will hurt its fourth-quarter earnings, and investors responded by driving shares down more than 4 percent.

Weaker than expected land drilling in the U.S. and Western Canada, combined with contractual delays and slowdowns overseas, are expected to cut earnings in the current quarter by 5 to 7 cents per share, the company predicts. It hasn't issued a fourth-quarter forecast and a spokesman wasn't immediately available Friday morning.

Analysts, on average, expect the oil services firm to earn $1.13 per share in the quarter.

The Houston company provides a variety of equipment and services for the oil and gas industry. It pumps high-pressure fluids underground to unlock oil and natural gas in a process called hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking." It helps companies evaluate how much oil sits in underground reservoirs, and Schlumberger provides drill bits, sensors, software and other equipment that are in constant demand during a drilling operation.

Although its third quarter results, released in October, were also weighed down by decade-low prices for natural gas in North America and the falling number of active rigs, it was able to offset that weakness through higher earnings across its units in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

It will release fourth quarter earnings in January.

The stock fell $4.26, or 4.2 percent, to $68.30 in morning trading after falling as low as $67.60 earlier. Its shares sank to a 52-week low of $59.12 in late June. They traded as high as $80.78 in February.