Oil

TotalEnergies Expects Steady Q4 as Strong Refining Margins Offset Weak Oil, LNG Prices

…TotalEnergies says overall results to be in line with last year
…Refining margins up 231% year-on-year, boosting downstream
…LNG segment to drop 40% due to lower prices, outages
…Higher upstream output limited losses due to lower oil price

 TotalEnergies expects fourth-quarter 2025 results to be in line with the previous year, as higher fuel refining margins and cash from selling stakes in renewable assets offset weaker oil and liquefied natural gas prices.

“The cash flow from business segments this quarter is expected to remain at the same level as last year, supported by accretive upstream production growth and continued improvement of downstream results,” it said in a trading statement.

Shares were up 0.73% at 56.54 euros in morning trading, while the broader European energy sector fell 1.2%.
TotalEnergies’ fourth-quarter bucked a general declining trend among majors, and “the company was able to capture the short term refining strength, while the new barrels in the upstream appear to be driving cash flow accretion,” RBC analyst Biraj Borkhataria wrote in an investor note.

“It is notable that year-on-year, TotalEnergies’ fourth-quarter cash flow from operations is flat on RBC’s estimates, versus Shell down 19% over the same period,” he said.

Earlier this month, BP and Shell flagged weak oil trading results, as Brent crude prices dropped to $63.73 a barrel in October-to-December due to oversupply fears.

Total’s European refining margin marker rose to $85.7 per metric ton in the fourth quarter, up 231% from a year earlier.

In October, CEO Patrick Pouyanne said he expected refining margins in Europe to rise due to U.S. sanctions and EU restrictions on Russian energy.

Downstream marketing and services results are expected to be up about 5% year-on-year.

A linear graph showing the margins for refining crude oil into fuels in Europe for French oil major TotalEnergies, from 2020 to 2025.

TotalEnergies said it boosted upstream oil and gas volumes to compensate for lower prices, leading to 5% year-on-year production growth. As a result, the decline in upstream results will be $6 per barrel, rather than the actual $11-per-barrel drop in crude prices.

Integrated LNG results will be in line with the third quarter of 2025 — a 40% drop year-on-year.

That’s partially due to LNG prices falling 18% year-on-year and planned maintenance at the Australian Ichthys LNG project, which came back online in November.

Integrated power cash flow is expected to have risen in the fourth quarter, due to several minority stakes in renewable assets being sold, leading the segment to achieve annual cash flow of $2.5 billion.

Source: Reuters

 

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