The anticipated profit represents a decline from the $2.21 billion earned in the third quarter, though it sits above the $1.2 billion recorded in the comparable period last year. Despite the earnings pressure, BP’s stock has shown resilience, outperforming its peer Shell with a 10% year-to-date gain, largely tracking the broader Stoxx Europe 600 Oil and Gas Index.
Capital Discipline and CEO Transition
Market attention is shifting toward BP's share buyback program, which stood at $750 million in November. Analysts at RBC Capital Markets indicate the company might suspend buybacks entirely to shore up the balance sheet before Meg O'Neill assumes the CEO role in April. Reducing net debt remains a core objective, and analysts argue that cutting the buyback is a pragmatic response to a softer energy price environment.The quarterly update also carries the weight of a significant impairment. BP previously warned of a writedown reaching $5 billion in its gas and low-carbon energy segments. According to HSBC, the bulk of this charge is likely tied to Archaea Energy, the U.S. biogas producer acquired in 2022.
Instead of a strategy overhaul, investors are looking for intensified efficiency measures. Barclays suggests BP may raise its cost-reduction ambitions:
- A new savings target of $8 billion to $10 billion through 2030.
- An increase from the prior $5 billion goal set for 2027.
- A heightened focus on capital efficiency over aggressive expansion.

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