August 2, 2008 11:35 AM
- Text
Production Declining, Exxon-Mobil Spends Billions on Buybacks
(MoneyWatch)
Upstream capital expenditures to develop new fields increased 36 percent to nearly $5.2 billion in the second quarter, with approximately 86 percent spent outside of the United States.
The startup in the second quarter of the East Area Natural Gas Liquids II project and the Deepwater Gunashli platform in the Azerbaijan section of the Caspian Sea are expected to produce 50,000 and 300,000 barrels of natural gas liquids per day, respectively.
In the United States, production volume in the quarter totaled 368 thousands of barrels daily, down 6.4 percent from last year. Where some of its smaller competitors are investing billions in developing local shale plays, like XTO Energy and EOG Resources, Exxon is buying back its own stock, having spent $8.8 billion on repurchases during the second quarter -- close to the approximate market capitalization of Continental Resources, the second-largest leaseholder in the Bakken Shale play stretching across North Dakota and Montana.
The Question: Given growing global restrictions on access to productive reserves, is a stock buyback the most prudent expenditure?
The Company: Exxon-Mobil, the world's largest oil and gas company- The Filing: Form 8-K filing with the SEC on July 31
- The Finding: ExxonMobil announced record net income of $11.7 billion in the second quarter, up 14 percent from last year, due to record-high oil prices. Management said it is investing billions to bring new supplies to the market, yet aggregate oil and gas production slipped 7.8 percent.
Upstream capital expenditures to develop new fields increased 36 percent to nearly $5.2 billion in the second quarter, with approximately 86 percent spent outside of the United States.
The startup in the second quarter of the East Area Natural Gas Liquids II project and the Deepwater Gunashli platform in the Azerbaijan section of the Caspian Sea are expected to produce 50,000 and 300,000 barrels of natural gas liquids per day, respectively.
In the United States, production volume in the quarter totaled 368 thousands of barrels daily, down 6.4 percent from last year. Where some of its smaller competitors are investing billions in developing local shale plays, like XTO Energy and EOG Resources, Exxon is buying back its own stock, having spent $8.8 billion on repurchases during the second quarter -- close to the approximate market capitalization of Continental Resources, the second-largest leaseholder in the Bakken Shale play stretching across North Dakota and Montana.
The Question: Given growing global restrictions on access to productive reserves, is a stock buyback the most prudent expenditure?
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