BP Lost $5.7 Billion in 2020, Its First Annual Loss in 10 Years, as Oil and Gas Demand Slumped during the Pandemic

BP plunged to a $5.7 billion annual loss in 2020, its first in a decade, as the pandemic took a heavy toll on oil demand, with fuel consumption continuing to slide so far this year amid global travel restrictions.
For the final quarter of 2020, BP reported a profit of $115 million, falling short of analysts’ forecasts due to weak oil and gas sales and subdued trading, it said on Tuesday.
“These results reflect a truly tough quarter,” Chief Financial Officer Murray Auchincloss said in a statement.
At 08:15 GMT, BP shares were down 3.2% at 258.9 pence.
“We expect renewed COVID-19 restrictions to have a greater impact on product demand, with January retail volumes down by around 20% year on year, compared with a decline of 11% in the fourth quarter,” BP said.
Oil demand is nevertheless expected to recover in 2021, the company said.
Tighter global natural gas markets are expected to further support profits, it said, although it saw coronavirus-related restrictions weighing on refined products demand in the first quarter.
Adjusted profit at BP’s downstream — or refining and marketing — business in the fourth quarter collapsed to $126 million, less than a tenth of what it was a year earlier.
BP’s shares have lost more than 40% of their value over the past year and remain near 25-year lows, battered by concerns over oil demand due to the pandemic as well as investor doubts over BP’s ability to successfully carry out its ambitious plan to shift away from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
Rivals including Royal Dutch Shell and Exxon Mobil have also seen their market capitalization sink in recent months.
BP’s overall fourth-quarter underlying replacement cost profit, its definition of net income, of $115 million fell short of the $360 million seen in a company-provided poll of analysts.
That compared with an $86 million profit in the third quarter and a profit of $2.6 billion a year earlier.
For the year, BP reported an underlying loss of $5.69 billion, compared with a profit of $10 billion in 2019.
BP’s debt pile of $39 billion is expected to rise in the first half of this year as it continues to struggle with a weak business environment, but the company said it remained on track to reduce it to $35 billion by early 2021.
At that debt level, BP plans to start share buybacks. BP’s dividend remained at 5.25 cents per share.

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