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Energy companies announce record profits amidst soaring prices
for US consumers
By Joseph Kay and Naomi Spencer
29 October 2005
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This week, the major international energy companies announced
sharp increases in profits for the third quarter. The energy giants
are benefiting from a prolonged period of rising energy costs,
exacerbated in September by the effects of Hurricanes Katrina
and Rita. The record profits are being paid directly from the
pockets of millions of Americans, who face increased gasoline
prices and the prospect of sharply higher home heating bills during
the winter.
Leading the pack was ExxonMobil, the worlds largest oil
company. Exxon reported third-quarter profits of $9.92 billion,
75 percent higher than its third-quarter earnings last year and
the largest quarterly profit ever reported by a US company. The
company also boasted revenues of more than $100 billion, another
US record and a 32 percent increase over the companys revenues
in the second-quarter.
The Wall Street Journal on Friday noted that Exxons
profits amounted to nearly $75,000 a minute, every minute, for
the entire three months of the quarter (July, August and September).
Exxons profit for the first nine months of the year, more
than $25 billion, already exceeds its annual profit last year.
The company made more money in the third quarter than all but
eight companies in the S&P 500 made in all of 2004.
ExxonMobil was not alone in reaping huge profits for the quarter.
Royal Dutch/Shell reported a company record of $9 billion, up
68 percent from last quarter; BP profits were up 34 percent to
$6.53 billion for the quarter; ChevronTexaco reported a 53 percent
increase to nearly $4 billion; and ConocoPhillipss profits
jumped 89 percent to $3.8 billion. These five multinational companies
are the five largest energy companies in the world and dominate
the US energy market.
These staggering sums dwarf what the US government has spent
on hurricane relief in Katrina, Rita and Wilma combined. The $43
billion raked in by just these five companies in only 90 days
would pay for the rebuilding of New Orleans. So much for the claims
that urgent social needs cant be met because there
is no money. There is wealth aplenty, but it is in the wrong
hands.
Exxon CEO Lee Raymond bristled at the suggestion that Exxon
was milking the destruction during the hurricane season to inflate
consumer costs. Profit is not a dirty word, he told
Fox News in a recent interview. And its absolutely
required in our industry to have an adequate level of profit to
be able to continue to invest.
In fact, most of Exxons profits went directly back into
the pockets of the wealthy and into executive salaries, not investment.
The company spent $6.8 billion in shareholder dividends and in
stock buybacks. Buybacks are intended to keep the stock price
high, which yields millions of dollars for top executives who
hold stock options. In 2004, another record-breaking year for
corporate profits, Raymond by himself received more than $38 million
in salary, stock, and bonuses from ExxonMobil. This year, his
total compensation package is reportedly worth more than $42 million.
The profits for Exxon and the other energy giants come largely
from the rise in crude oil prices. The major energy companies
are vertically integrated, meaning that they have stakes in many
different levels of the energy sector. They are particularly active
in both the initial extraction of oil and the oil-refining process,
during which the oil is transformed into different forms, including
gasoline. Together, the five companies control 50 percent of US
refining capacity. Most also have major stakes in the natural
gas industry.
A September 25 article in the Washington Post noted
that the bulk of the profit coming from the rise in gasoline prices
over the past several months has gone to these energy giants.
When the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline peaked
at $3.07 recently, it was partly because the nations refineries
were getting an estimated 99 cents on each gallon sold,
the paper noted. That was more than three times the amount
they earned a year ago when regular unleaded was selling for $1.87.
Companies that extract oil from the ground pulled in an additional
47 cents on the gallon, according to the paper.
These record profits involve a massive transfer of wealth from
the broad majority of the population. In September, consumer prices
shot up 1.2 percent, due largely to a 122 percent rise in energy
costs.
Average Americans bore the immediate brunt of the inflation
spike last month by paying 18 percent more for gas and considerably
more for food, as energy costs worked their way into the prices
of other goods. While gas prices have eased back slightly in October
compared to September, the current cost per gallon, around $2.60,
is still 78 percent higher than in 2001.
Mounting financial strain
The financial strain felt by the majority of households is
certain to intensify in the fourth quarter. Home heating is projected
to cost average families between $1,400 and $1,600 this winter.
According to the federal Energy Information Administration, families
that heat their homes with natural gas can expect heating costs
to rise by 48 percent over last years already inflated level.
Energy costs are in large part responsible for the declining
real wages of working people in the US. It is not only the poor
who are affected, but the vast majority of the population. Household
budgets are under intense strain across the country, and millions
of people this winter will face the necessity of choosing between
basic necessities such as heat, food and health care.
The Bush administration has made clear that consumers will
be left largely on their own. On Thursday, Energy Secretary Samuel
Bodman rejected calls from a few Senate Democrats to tax the profits
from the energy companies at a higher rate in order to pay for
heating assistance to low-income families. That would be some
kind of windfall profits tax, he said. We have proven,
I thought, to our general satisfaction back in the 70s and
80s that that didnt work.
Legislation that would have increased funding for the Low-Income
Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) was defeated in the Senate
for the third time this month on Thursday, leaving the program
stagnating with the smallest budget relative to demand since it
was created in 1981. Instead, congressional leaders are planning
to cut billions of dollars from social programs such as food stamps
and Medicaid. On Wednesday, Bush urged them to push the
envelope in finding ways to scale back federal programs.
There are several other factors that are combining to worsen
the financial position of American workers. The new bankruptcy
bill went into effect earlier this month, making it harder for
ordinary people to escape increasing debt burdens. Moreover, interest
rates are rising in line with federal policy, meaning workers
face higher rates on credit card and home mortgage loans. With
the threat of inflation rearing its head, the Federal Reserve
will likely raise interest rates even further, which could have
disastrous consequences, particularly given the increased use
of adjustable rate home mortgages.
The case for public ownership
The rise in energy prices is the product of a long-term consolidation
within the industry. According to a March 2004 report by the consumer
group Public Citizen, the five largest energy companies together
control 14.2 percent of global oil production, more than 50 percent
of US domestic refinery capacity, 62 percent of the retail gasoline
market and 22 percent of US domestic natural gas production.
In contrast, in 1993, the top five companies controlled only
7.7 percent of global oil production, 33 percent of domestic refinery
capacity, 27 percent of the retail gasoline market and 12.7 percent
of domestic natural gas production.
The concentration of the industry has not produced any increase
in refining capacity in the United States, which now lags seriously
behind the demand for gasoline. The shortage in refining capacity
is generally cited as one of the main causes behind the rise in
prices, a shortage exacerbated due to the damage to refining facilities
caused by the hurricanes.
The oil companies indicated on Friday that they had no plans
for increasing supply to bring down prices. A surplus of
supply is not good for the industry, declared Shell president
John Hofmeister. Just as a surplus of demand is not good
for industry. We strive for balance.
There is a justified sense of outrage within the population
that these companies have benefited from the Hurricane Katrina,
which wrecked havoc on the lives of hundreds of thousands of people,
destroying homes, jobs and much of the city of New Orleans.
Energy companies share responsibility for the devastation,
as they have been the principal bulwark within the ruling elite
opposing any measures to address the problem of global warming,
which many scientists believe is in part responsible for the record
number of intense hurricanes in recent years. Completely beholden
to the energy corporations, the Bush administration has scuttled
even the most limited measures to contain carbon dioxide emissions,
which cause warming and are produced by the combustion of oil
and other fossil fuels.
The enormous corporate profits have engendered a certain nervousness
within the energy companies and their close allies in government.
Exxon was so concerned about negative public reaction to the massive
profits that it ran advertisements in major newspapers on Thursday
arguing that its profits were not out of line with those of other
major companies.
Politicians of both parties have felt obliged to make certain
noises and empty threats. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a
right-wing Republican from Tennessee, said in a statement on Thursday,
If there are those who abuse the free enterprise system
to advantage themselves and their businesses at the expense of
all Americans, they ought to be exposed, and they ought to be
ashamed.
This nervousness expresses an understanding within ruling circles
that the situation in the energy industry could engender a sharp
increase in oppositional moods within the population as a whole.
However, the entire political establishment is completely committed
to the defense of the basic principle underlying the conditions
in the energy market: that decisions profoundly affecting the
lives of millions of people should be made based upon the profit
interests of private companies and the self-enrichment of a corporate
elite.
The solution to the problem could not be clearer: these energy
companies should be transformed into public utilities, run democratically
and in the interests of the population as a whole.
See Also:
Bush names another "free market"
ally of Wall Street to succeed Greenspan at the Federal Reserve
[26 October 2005]
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