Schlumberger reported an
unexpected loss and cut more jobs as cheap crude has pushed a recovery in the
oilfield services market out further than expected.
News
Agency of Nigeria report continues:
After
firing 8,000 in the first quarter, Schlumberger just laid off another 8,000
workers, with Paal Kibsgaard, chief executive officer, saying the worst may be
over.
Analysts
argue that the number may have been more, because while Schlumberger reported a
headcount of 113,000 people at the beginning of this week, in the earnings
released on Thursday, it said the company has “approximately 100,000
employees”.
The
second-quarter loss was US$2.16 billion, or US$1.56 cents a share, compared
with a profit of US$1.12 billion, or 88 cents, a year earlier, the Houston and
Paris-based company said in a statement Thursday.
It
was expected to post a US$296.3 million profit, according to the average of 28
analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The company also said it cut more
than 16,000 jobs in the first half of the year.
As
the downturn dragged on, executives at the world’s largest oilfield services
provider have had to push back their expectations for an improvement in
drilling and fracing work, with crude prices remaining more than 50% lower than
their peak in 2014.
Schlumberger
rose in after-markets trading as Kibsgaard said the downturn appears to have
bottomed.
“In
the second quarter market conditions worsened further in most parts of our
global operations. But in spite of the continuing headwinds we now appear to
have reached the bottom of the cycle,” Kibsgaard said in the statement.
According
to World Oil, Schlumberger stock, which closed 0.7% lower at US$80.02, gained
as much as 0.7% in after-hours trading.
Schlumberger
has made several rounds of job cuts to adjust to lower spending by its
customers.
Patrick
Schorn, Schlumberger’s president, said last month that the second quarter “may
represent the final approach to a market bottom”.
In
April, Schlumberger closed its US$14.8-billion takeover of Cameron
International Corp., marking the largest deal among oilfield contractors this
year.
Halliburton,
the world’s second-largest oilfield services provider, reported a
second-quarter loss of 14 cents per share, excluding certain items, earlier
this week.
The
company also said the North American market reached its lowest point in the
downturn during the second quarter and forecast a “modest uptick” in the rig
count for the remainder of the year.
“The major debate is the trajectory of North America recovery,” David Anderson, an analyst at Barclays, wrote July 19 in a note to investors. “We expect SLB and HAL again to provide contrasting narratives on North America.”
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