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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, April 28, 2006

Exxon's $8.4B quarterly profit fuels anger

By James R. Healey and Matt Krantz
USA Today

Mike Meyer fills a gas can at an Exxon gas station in Marysville, Calif. ExxonMobil Corp. yesterday posted the fifth highest quarterly profit for any public company in history.

MAX WHITTAKER | Associated Press

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ExxonMobil, the biggest publicly traded oil company, said yesterday its first-quarter profit jumped 6.9 percent from a year ago, to $8.4 billion.

That was a first-quarter record for Exxon, and the fourth-best first quarter ever reported by a company in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index. While short of Wall Street forecasts, it triggered fresh outrage elsewhere as ExxonMobil became the lightning rod for fury over high gasoline prices.

"While ExxonMobil executives are popping champagne and celebrating their record profits, American families are popping antacids under the strain of soaring gas prices," said Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., in a remark typical of the howls. Other reaction:

  • The Bush administration, criticized by environmentalists for not raising fuel-economy standards, asked Congress for authority to boost mileage requirements in cars for the first time since the mid-1980s. Even on a fast track, it would be two years from Congress' go-ahead before cars covered by new standards hit showrooms.

  • Senate Republicans proposed a measure that would give taxpayers $100 checks to offset high fuel prices and suspend the 18.4-cent-per-gallon fuel tax until Sept. 30.

    Checks would go to individuals with taxable income of up to $125,000 and couples with taxable income up to $150,000.

    Calling $100 a "token gesture," Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., proposed $500, which she said is how much more an average family will spend on energy this year.

  • Consumer advocates sharpened their rhetoric. Americans must "choose between filling their tanks and paying their bills, and ExxonMobil is laughing all the way to the bank," said Anna Aurilio of the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, reflecting the general tone.

    The average price of gasoline in the U.S. is $2.927 per gallon, up 0.6 cents overnight and 69.8 cents more than a year ago, travel club AAA reported yesterday. The price has been edging closer to the peak $3.057 reported by AAA Sept. 5 after hurricane damage to energy operations in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Most of Exxon's first-quarter earnings were from oil and natural gas, not from selling gasoline.

    And Exxon's profit margins are below-average compared with others that have triggered no outcry. Exxon's first-quarter profit margin was 9.4 percent, meaning it kept 9.4 cents of every $1 in revenue. Microsoft kept 27.3 cents of every $1 in revenue in its most recent quarter; General Electric, 11.4 cents and McDonald's, 12.3 cents. In fact, Exxon is below the 11-cent average of Standard & Poor's 500 companies, says analyst Howard Silverblatt.

    The furor is likely to continue. Reuters Estimates predicts ExxonMobil's operating profit, which excludes one-time items, will rise 2.9 percent this year to a record $35 billion.