Baker Hughes Warns of Broad Inflation After Missing Estimates
2022.04.20 15:37
© Bloomberg. The travelling block hangs beside drill pipes on the derrick of a drill rig during oil drilling operations by Targin JSC, a unit of Sistema PJSFC, in an oilfield operated by Bashneft PAO near Ufa, Russia, on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016. Bashneft distributes petroleum products and petrochemicals around the world and in Russia via filling stations. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
(Bloomberg) — Baker Hughes Co (NASDAQ:BKR) reported lower than expected first-quarter earnings and said the rest of the year will impacted by “broad-based inflation and supply pressures”, exacerbated by “unfortunate geopolitical events.”
The world’s second-biggest oil servicer reported earnings of 15 cents a share, excluding certain items, that missed analysts’ expectations, according to the statement. Shares fell 2.7 percent in pre-market trading.
“Our first quarter results reflect operating in a very volatile market environment during the first few months of 2022,” Chief Executive Officer Lorenzo Simonelli said Wednesday in a statement. “As we look ahead to the rest of 2022, we see a favorable oil and gas price backdrop but also a dynamic operating environment.”
Service companies, which do the fracking and drilling onshore and offshore, are staging a return to growth after a two year stretch that included cratering energy prices and the pandemic-driven slump in worldwide economic activity. While their clients have been raking in record free cash flow, the contractors who provide the manpower to find oil and drill the wells have lagged behind financially as they navigate supply chain snarls and attempt to pass on cost inflation in the form of higher service prices.
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