A net income increase of 75% and a 68% jump in profits from two oil companies. No, we weren't sucker punched because of Katrina, the oil companies somehow deserve that money. Yeah, Geoff, you work for big oil, but aren't they getting harder and harder to defend? I know I'm not buying it.
Next will be the post about how no one understands your industry...
(A swing and a miss.) Uh, no.... I work in that other "evil" industry: Big Pharma.
The NYTimes articles says profits jumped at least 68%, and Bob says sales only increased 33%. Doesn't that indicate that there is a huge increase in profit margin?
If profits increased 68% and sales increased 33%, then that could mean the COGS decreased.
Look, take a few seconds and look at the data youselves:
Exxon Mobil Q3 Financials
(All $ in millions)
Revenues 2005 Q3: 100,717
Revenues 2004 Q3: 76,375
That's jump in sales of 31.9%
Total Costs + Income Taxes 2005 Q3: 90,797
Total Costs + Income Taxes 2004 Q3: 70,695
That's a jump in costs and taxes of 28.4%
Net Income 2005 Q3: 9,920
Net Income 2004 Q3: 5,680
That's a jump in Net Income of 74.6%
2005 Q3: 100,717 - 90,797 = 9,920
2004 Q3: 76,375 - 70,695 = 5,680
Profit Margin 2005 Q3: 9,920 / 100,717 = 9.8%
Profit Margin 2004 Q3: 5,680 / 76,375 = 7.4%
That's an increase of 32.4%
So, how did Exxon Mobil's Net Income jump a whopping 74.6%? By jacking those prices through the roof after Katrina, right? Not quite. Almost all of the price increase went to cover Exxon Mobil's increased costs.
Let's assume that the Chairman of Exxon Mobil declared that, in the interest of goodwill to people that think that "Big Oil" is evil, in the wake of Katrina Exxon Mobil will not make a penny more in 2005 Q3 as it did in 2004. They'd accomplish this by cutting prices, which would take down revenues. Assuming no tax consequences for simplicity, here's what the numbers would look like:
Revenues: 96,477
Total Costs + Taxes: 90,797
Net Income: 5,680
That 96,477 figure would be reduced from the 100,717 number that Exxon Mobil actually posted. That would only be a
4.4% drop in revenues. So basically, people are getting all bent out of shape over something that's the equal of a 4.4% swing in sales. Forgive me if I don't express outrage over a 4.4% "gouge".