Statoil ASA (STL), Norway’s biggest energy company, said adjusted profit fell in the third quarter as both production and prices for oil and gas slipped.
Adjusted net income, which excludes financial items, fell to 9.1 billion kroner ($1.4 billion) from 12.1 billion kroner a year earlier, the Stavanger-based company said in a statement today. That missed an estimate of 9.3 billion kroner from a survey of 17 analysts by Bloomberg. The company had a net loss of 4.7 billion kroner due to impairments on oil sands projects and on developments in the Gulf of Mexico and Angola.
“Earnings were negatively impacted by lower oil and gas prices and our decision to defer gas sales to enhance value,” Eldar Saetre, acting chief executive officer of Statoil, said in the statement. “Our negative net income in accordance with IFRS relates to quarter-specific items. We delivered strong operational performance and cash generation in the quarter.”
Oil prices have plunged about $30 from a $115 high in June as global supply, boosted by U.S. shale production, outpaces demand. Benchmark Brent crude averaged $103.6 a barrel in the three months ended Sept. 30, 7 percent lower than the same quarter last year.
Statoil got an average of $91.2 a barrel for oil in the third quarter, down from $102.9 a barrel year ago. Its internal gas price fell to 1.20 krone a cubic meter from 1.78 krone, it said earlier on its website.
The 67 percent state-owned company is looking for a new CEO following Helge Lund’s unexpected resignation this month to join smaller U.K. rival BG Group Plc after leading the company for a decade.
Statoil vowed to maintain a strategy of cutting costs to raise shareholder returns under Lund’s successor. The company this year scrapped earlier production-growth targets, cut planned spending and started implementing a vast efficiency program in a bid to cover investments and dividends with cash from operations by 2016.
Statoil’s production of oil and gas fell to 1.829 million barrels of oil equivalent a day in the third quarter from 1.852 million barrels in the same period last year as capacity was reduced through asset sales, including a $2.65 billion deal with OMV AG and a $1.45 billion divestment in Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz project last year. Production beat the average estimate of 1.796 million barrels in a survey of 26 analysts conducted by the company itself and released last week.