Equinor First-Quarter Profit Rises More than Expected
Record output and higher energy prices lifted first-quarter profit, but cash flow fell 19% and missed expectations, pressuring shares.
- On Wednesday, Equinor ASA missed quarterly cash-flow forecasts, causing shares to fall 7.6% despite the Norwegian oil major posting its strongest profit in three years on record output and Iran war-driven price gains.
- The Iran war disrupted global energy flows, sending Brent crude prices surging above $100 per barrel and helping Equinor achieve record production of 2.31 million barrels of oil equivalent daily.
- Underlying cash flow from operations totaled just over $6 billion, missing the $7.5 billion estimate as collateral requirements rose, though adjusted operating income reached $2.86 billion, exceeding analyst forecasts.
- Equinor reiterated its decision to cut share buybacks by 70% to preserve cash while maintaining its quarterly dividend at $0.39 per share and launching a second buyback tranche of $375 million.
- CEO Anders Opedal expects market normalization will take at least six months, and the company will present a strategy update next month that may revisit capital distributions amid continued price volatility.
11 Articles
11 Articles
Equinor got paid extra well for its oil in the first quarter. Now the boss answers about dividends, the Hormuz crisis and the oil price.
The Norwegian energy group Equinor has presented a net profit of 3,105 million dollars (2,655 million euros to the current change) in the first trimester of 2026, 18% more year-on-year. "The net financial result was benefited from a development of positive value of the financial investments in the first trimester", the company said in its balance sheet. The revenues amounted to 27,843 million (23,809 million euros), a 7% less year-on-year, refle…
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