DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

Fluor Corp.'s (FLR) second-quarter earnings fell 19% as revenue fell and a year-ago gain made for difficult comparisons, but the bottom line topped Wall Street expectations.

"Fluor's focus on specific near-term prospects in its diversified end markets has once again allowed us to record substantial new bookings in a very challenging economic environment," said Chairman and Chief Executive Alan Boeckmann. "While we have posted strong results to date, we remain sensitive to the pace of global economic recovery which could impact the timing of future new awards."

The company has been resilient in the recession, though it lowered its 2009 earnings outlook in May to reflect the cancellation of $2.1 billion in Kuwaiti contracts. That view was reiterated Monday.

Fluor also stands to benefit from the U.S. stimulus package and growth in nuclear energy, while the resurgence of oil prices may also trickle down to the bottom line.

The company reported quarterly earnings of $169.3 million, or 93 cents a share, compared with $208 million, or $1.17 a share, a year earlier. The year-ago period included a 27-cent gain from a joint-venture interest.

Revenue fell 8.3% to $5.29 billion.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected earnings of 91 cents a share and revenue of $5.81 billion.

The company noted it cut overhead costs almost a third to $42 million.

New project awards rose 5.9% to $6.77 billion. Backlog was $30.89 billion, down 6.4% from a year earlier but up almost the same percentage from March 31.

The oil-and-gas segment posted a 7% increase in profit, as wider margins offset lower project activity. Earnings at the industrial and infrastructure division dropped 72% on the prior-year gain while the government segment's income tripled.

Last week, rival Foster Wheeler Ltd. (FWLT) reported weaker second-quarter results on lower demand for engineering and construction and construction projects. However, the earnings handily beat Wall Street expectations.

In after-hours trading, Fluor shares were up 0.5% at $57.77. The stock has doubled since late November but remains down nearly a third from its 52-week high nearly a year ago.

-By Jay Miller, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2355; jay.miller@dowjones.com