BHP Fiscal Year Profit Jumps on Petroleum Sale, Strong Commodity Prices
16 August 2022 - 9:25AM
Dow Jones News
By Rhiannon Hoyle
BHP Group Ltd. said its annual profit nearly tripled as it
benefited from the sale of its petroleum business and strong
commodity prices, but it signaled an uncertain outlook as rising
interest rates take their toll on developed economies.
BHP, the world's biggest miner by market value, on Tuesday
reported a net profit of $30.90 billion for its fiscal year through
June, up from a profit of $11.30 billion in the same period a year
earlier.
BHP declared a dividend of $1.75 a share. Its total payout for
the fiscal year, of $3.25 per share, was up 8% on the year
prior.
The miner recorded an exceptional gain of $7.1 billion following
the merger of its petroleum business with Woodside Energy Group
Ltd. It also sold some coal operations.
Underlying profit--a closely watched measure that strips out
some one-time items--was up by 39% to $23.82 billion, BHP said.
That beat market consensus of $20.89 billion, compiled by Vuma from
17 analyst forecasts.
Chief Executive Mike Henry said policies introduced by China to
support its economy are likely to shore up commodity demand in
coming months. However, developed economies are facing a slowdown
as central banks raise interest rates to tame inflation, tight
labor markets persist, and geopolitical uncertainty continues to
weigh.
"The direct and indirect impacts of Europe's energy crisis are a
particular point of concern," Mr. Henry said.
Weaker output of most of its commodities was eclipsed by the
impact of strong raw material prices.
The miner was paid more than three times as much for the
metallurgical coal it mines than it was in the year-earlier period,
as global production struggled to keep up with demand. BHP runs the
world's biggest export operation for metallurgical coal, used in
steelmaking, in joint venture with Japan's Mitsubishi Corp.
Prices for its thermal coal also surged, nearly quadrupling
year-on-year. While the price that BHP received for iron ore fell
by 13%, it was paid 9% more for its copper and 43% more for its
nickel.
Write to Rhiannon Hoyle at rhiannon.hoyle@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 15, 2022 19:10 ET (23:10 GMT)
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