Breaking News:

OPEC Resolves Compensation Plans for Overproducing Members

Exxon Set For Fourth Loss In 2020 After $20-Billion Write-Down

ExxonMobil is on track to book another quarterly loss this year-its fourth consecutive loss in 2020-announcing that it expects to book a massive up to $20-billion write-down for Q4, the U.S. oil and gas supermajor signaled in an SEC filing on Wednesday.  

Impairments of between $18 billion and $20 billion will weigh on the fourth-quarter earnings in Exxon's upstream division, the company said, narrowing the previously reported $17 billion-$20 billion range announced at end-November in its first major asset write-downs in its modern history.

The Q4 loss would be Exxon's fourth straight quarterly loss in 2020 in which oil corporations struggled in both the upstream and downstream due to the crash in oil prices and the collapse of oil demand in the pandemic.

Higher liquids and gas prices in the fourth quarter are likely to boost Exxon's upstream earnings compared to Q3 by between $200 million and $1 billion, compared to a loss of $400 million in the upstream for Q3, the filing showed. However, the negative impact of the write-down will overshadow the positive boost to earnings from higher oil and gas prices.

The downstream division is set for another loss for the fourth quarter, while the chemicals division is on track to boost profits compared to Q3 due to a $200 million-$400 million positive impact from improved chemicals margins, Exxon's filing shows. For Q3, Exxon booked a $700-million profit in its chemicals division.

Exxon is scheduled to report fourth-quarter financials on February 2, 2021.

Refinitiv IBES data, cited by Reuters, points to the supermajor booking an adjusted loss of $3.47 billion, or $0.61 per share loss, for Q4, versus a profit of $5.69 billion, or $1.33 per share, for the same period of 2019.  

Exxon is wrapping up a challenging year. Its stock is down by 41 percent in 2020, and a growing number of shareholders and investors are calling for the supermajor to change with the times and invest more in clean energy.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:

Back to homepage


Loading ...

« Previous: OPEC+ Compliance Continues To Exceed 100%

Next: Possible Mine Found On Oil Tanker Off Iraq »

Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews.  More

Comments

  • George Doolittle - 31st Dec 2020 at 12:28pm:
    Seems to me downstream is the cash machine as prices at the pump have hardly collapsed in the least but not so oil prices which at one time were at negative 40 us dollars a barrel.

    Anyhow "just minting money in West Texas" no doubt...same as Chevron which...well imagine that also announced a massive write down this Year.

    See what the New Year brings. Great lesson in why to do avoid MLPs tho
Leave a comment