Burghley Capital Notes Shell’s Impressive Q1 Beat

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Shell’s latest results point to disciplined capital returns, with adjusted earnings topping forecasts, a smaller buyback starting today and trading strength cushioning working-capital swings as oil prices remain elevated after Gulf disruption.

Burghley Capital Pte. Ltd. is tracking a new earnings surprise from Shell in the first quarter, with the energy major putting adjusted profits at $6.9 billion and highlighting how commodity volatility is flowing through to balance sheets and shareholder returns.

Adjusted earnings of $6.9 billion over the quarter top the market’s $6.4 billion consensus and compare with $5.6 billion in the same quarter a year earlier, a result that ranks as the group’s strongest in roughly two years.

Oil remains the accelerant. Crude benchmarks sit around 40% higher over the past ten weeks as tensions around Iran and the wider Gulf keep traders focused on supply security, a backdrop that keeps the question of capital discipline near the top of every investor call.

Operationally, the chemicals and products unit generates $2.2 billion of adjusted earnings for the quarter, ahead of the $1.4 billion that analysts anticipate for the same period and up from roughly $0.5 billion in the comparable period a year earlier. Refining runs at 99% utilisation through the quarter, with trading and optimisation benefiting from price dislocations.

Management’s response is not just about beating forecasts; it is about calibrating cash returns. Shell sets a new share repurchase programme at $3.4 billion starting today, down from about $3.9 billion in the preceding quarter, while net debt stands at $52.6 billion at quarter-end. James Barker, who runs private equity at Burghley Capital Pte. Ltd., reads the move as a broader principle in action: “when geopolitics drives prices faster than fundamentals, the right answer is flexible buybacks and a balance sheet that stays credible”. The point, he argues, has relevance well outside oil.

Dividend policy also stays in view. The interim dividend for the quarter comes in at $0.4 a share, and the group repeats its ambition to grow the dividend by around 4% each year under its progressive framework. The current cash distribution target of 40% to 50% of operating cash flow, compared with 20% to 30% under the previous framework, keeps the focus on total returns rather than a single headline number.

Cash conversion is where the quarter tightens. Free cash flow comes in at $3.3 billion over the quarter, lower than about $6 billion in the comparable period a year earlier, after working-capital swings drive an outflow of roughly $12.6 billion. Shell also points to a working-capital drag for the quarter in a range of $11.3 billion to $16.9 billion, underlining how quickly high prices can inflate inventories and receivables.

Margins swing hard. Refining indicators move from about $15.8 a barrel in the preceding quarter to roughly $19.1 in the quarter now being reported, while chemicals utilisation lifts from 76% to 81% to 85% over the same period. In north-west Europe, benchmark margins slide to about negative $7.3 a barrel in the later part of the quarter from around $17.1 earlier, and the industry starts pricing in run cuts of up to 500,000 barrels a day over the coming weeks.

Supply risk adds another layer. Damage at Pearl GTL Train Two and disruption around Ras Laffan feed into guidance, with restoration expected to take around a year on current estimates and repair costs staying below $0.5 billion. The company trims production guidance to 880,000 to 920,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day for the forthcoming quarter, down from 948,000 previously, and puts LNG liquefaction volumes at 7.6 to 8 million tonnes for the same period.

Liquidity therefore matters as much as earnings. Shell ends the quarter with cash and equivalents of $22.5 billion and undrawn credit facilities of $11.3 billion, and it continues to frame a 15% to 20% gearing corridor as a comfort zone. Barker argues that “markets reward returns that do not depend on stretching leverage, because today’s premium can unwind quickly”, which leaves investors watching for working-capital normalisation as closely as for oil prices.

For Burghley Capital, the first quarter reads as a reminder that headline profits can beat expectations by about 8% over the quarter while cash flows tell a more nuanced story about timing and risk. Shell’s update keeps attention on whether disciplined capital returns and trading resilience hold if the commodity cycle softens.

About Burghley Capital


Founded in 2017, Burghley Capital Pte. Ltd. (UEN: 201731389D) is an investment management firm headquartered in Singapore with a focus on long-only strategies. It combines detailed market analysis with tailored investment approaches and advisory support for institutional investors and private clients worldwide. Resources: https://burghleycapital.com/resources. Media enquiries: Martin Wei, m.wei@burghleycapital.com, https://burghleycapital.com.

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