Earnings Of Big 3 Oil Supermajors Sending Mixed Signals On Demand Recovery

 | May 05, 2020 04:56AM ET

The global oil industry is in the midst of a severe downturn, a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on national economies. In order to maintain corporate health, the world’s largest and strongest energy producers, often referred to as oil supermajors, are cutting output, laying off thousands of workers, and slashing their once sacrosanct dividends as they struggle to preserve cash.

Even as this massive restructuring takes place, investors are looking for signs of demand revival so they can take advantage of these companies' beaten-down stock prices.

Below, a review of the key points reported during last week's quarterly earnings releases from the world’s big-three oil companies. Our goal: to find out whether these players see the bottom in demand destruction that slashed the benchmark Brent crude price to $26 a barrel from $70 about four months ago.

h2 1. ExxonMobil: Seeing Encouraging Early Signs/h2

Exxon Mobil (NYSE:NYSE:XOM), the largest U.S. producer, posted its first loss in at least three decades, reporting a $610 million hit after it took $3 billion in writedowns during Q1 2020 when it released results on Friday, May 1.