Maersk Suspended Its Share Buyback Program amid Red Sea Disruptions

Maersk noted the uncertainty in the 2024 earnings and expected them to be well below last year’s level. (The company’s website)
Maersk noted the uncertainty in the 2024 earnings and expected them to be well below last year’s level. (The company’s website)
TT
20

Maersk Suspended Its Share Buyback Program amid Red Sea Disruptions

Maersk noted the uncertainty in the 2024 earnings and expected them to be well below last year’s level. (The company’s website)
Maersk noted the uncertainty in the 2024 earnings and expected them to be well below last year’s level. (The company’s website)

Danish shipping and logistics company Maersk on Thursday reported fourth-quarter profits below expectations and said it expects 2024 earnings well below last year's level amid an oversupply of container vessels although uncertainty remains around the impact of Red Sea disruptions.

Maersk suspended its share buyback program amid this uncertainty.

Maersk said it expected underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) of between $1 billion and $6 billion this year, compared with the $9.6 billion achieved last year, according to Reuters.

"High uncertainty remains around the duration and degree of the Red Sea disruption with the duration from one quarter to full year reflected in the guidance range," it said in a statement.

Maersk said EBITDA dropped to $839 million in the fourth quarter from $6.54 billion a year earlier, lagging analysts' expectations of $1.13 billion.

“The impact of this situation is causing new uncertainty for how this is going to play out from an earnings perspective throughout the year,” CEO Vincent Clerc told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe.”

“We have very little visibility as to whether this is a situation that will resolve in a matter of weeks or months, or whether this is something that is going to be with us for the full year,” he added.

In a statement, the company added that its board had decided to “immediately suspend the share buy-back program, with a re-initiation to be reviewed once market conditions in Ocean [division] have settled.”

The global supply chains have faced dangerous disruption since the end of 2023 after the giant shipping companies detoured their trips away from the Red Sea after a series of Houthis attacks.



Israel Awards Natural Gas Exploration Licenses to BP, Socar and NewMed

Vehicles drive past a BP petrol station in Liverpool, Britain, February 7, 2023. (Reuters)
Vehicles drive past a BP petrol station in Liverpool, Britain, February 7, 2023. (Reuters)
TT
20

Israel Awards Natural Gas Exploration Licenses to BP, Socar and NewMed

Vehicles drive past a BP petrol station in Liverpool, Britain, February 7, 2023. (Reuters)
Vehicles drive past a BP petrol station in Liverpool, Britain, February 7, 2023. (Reuters)

Israel awarded licenses to BP, Azeri national oil firm Socar and local company NewMed Energy on Monday to explore natural gas in Israeli waters as the country seeks to boost domestic gas reserves and expand exports.

In 2023 the trio jointly placed a bid for two offshore blocks in a fourth licensing round. Israel's Energy Ministry said that additional licenses are expected to be granted and a fifth bidding round is planned for later this year, according to Reuters.

As part of the licenses for the so-called Cluster I near the Leviathan field, Socar will act as operator of the exploration consortium while BP will be involved in Israel's natural gas sector for the first time. NewMed is already the largest stakeholder in Leviathan, the giant offshore field operated by Chevron.

Each company will hold about a third of the rights in each license.

Cluster I is a 1,700 sq km area located in the Mediterranean at the northern part of Israel's economic waters.

The consortium is expected to conduct seismic and geological surveys in the first phase of exploration, with drilling in a second phase based on survey results.

“Natural gas is a strategic asset that strengthens our economic and diplomatic standing worldwide, particularly in the Middle East,” said Energy Minister Eli Cohen. “That’s why we are working to expand natural gas production for both the domestic market and exports, especially in these times.”

The gas-rich offshore basin straddling Egypt, Israel, Cyprus and Lebanon has drawn some of the world's top energy companies in recent years, particularly as Europe scrambles to secure supplies to replace Russian gas in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Israel is positioning itself as a regional energy hub and has committed to supplying natural gas to Europe, which has been diversifying away from Russia.

Exploration for oil and gas resources is a high-risk, high-reward business that includes seismic surveys and the drilling of wells, a process that can take several years.

The ministry reported this month that Israel's natural gas exports to Egypt and Jordan rose 13.4% in 2024.