Gazprom Cancels Dividend for First Time Since 1998. Shares Drop

Reuters
Thursday, June 30, 2022

Russian gas giant Gazprom has decided not to pay dividends on last year's results, the first time it will not pay out since 1998, sending its shares plunging by nearly 30%.

"The shareholders decided that in the current situation it is not advisable to pay dividends based on the 2021 results," Deputy CEO Famil Sadygov said.

He added that Gazprom would rather focus on Russian regional gasification, preparation for the heating season and paying increased taxes.

Gazprom shares plunged by more than 27% on the decision, which reversed a board recommendation to pay a dividend of 52.53 roubles per share in what would have been its biggest payout. 

Gazprom plans to spend 526 billion roubles ($10 billion) by 2025 to increase Russia's gasification from its current level of 72%.

On Thursday Russian lawmakers backed a draft bill that would provide for a one-off increase in Gazprom's mineral extraction tax bill by 416 billion roubles ($8 billion) this year as the government boosts social payments.

Analysts criticised decision to abandon dividends, which are one of the few ways Russian retail investors can profit at a time of severe Western sanctions on Russian companies.

"This is a disaster for Gazprom shares, as the company's only investment appeal was high dividends. The decision is also likely partly linked to the finance ministry's willingness to increase ... budget revenue," Tinkoff Investments analysts said.

Gazprom's decision comes as the Group of Seven economic powers looks to cap the price of Russian oil and gas as a way to prevent Moscow from profiting from its actions in Ukraine, which have led to a sharp rise in energy prices. Read full story

Russian gas flows to Europe via Ukraine and the Nord Stream 1 pipeline have also fallen.

In its statement on Thursday, Gazprom did not mention either the G7 proposals to cap gas prices or the reduced flows to Europe, both of which threaten to cut its revenue and potentially its tax payments as a result.

"The main fear is that minority shareholders may not get anything if the state moves to the constant practice of withdrawing most of the (Gazprom) profits through the tax. It is also a minus for the entire market in 2022," Finam analysts said.

($1 = 52.5000 roubles)

(Reporting by Reuters/Editing by Jason Neely and David Goodman)

Categories: Finance Energy Industry News Activity Europe Asia People & Company News

Related Stories

Global Oil Supply to Fall Short of Demand as Iran War Goes On, IEA Says

Dolphin Drilling Boosts Backlog with Harbour Energy Deal, Oil India Extension

TotalEnergies Eyes Black Sea Exploration with Türkiye’s TPAO

Oil Holds Steady as Supply Risks from War Persist

Oil Hikes 7% after Trump Says US-Israel will Keep Striking Iran

Oil Rises as Widening Conflict Endangers Red Sea, Hormuz Flows

Eni Exits Consortium for Oil and Gas Exploration Offshore Israel

Big Oil to Reap Billions from Energy Price Surge

Asian Buyers Rush for Russian Oil Amid Supply Disruption

Iran War Sends LNG Prices Soaring, Curbing Asia Demand

Current News

Longitude to Integrate SynergenOG Following ABL Group Acquisition

Petronas Signs 20-year Charter Deal with MISC for Five LNG Carrier Newbuilds

Global Oil Supply to Fall Short of Demand as Iran War Goes On, IEA Says

Iraq, Pakistan Secure Oil Shipments via Hormuz with Iran Agreements

Norway O&G Revenue Forecast Jumps 30% for '26

QatarEnergy, TotalEnergies and ConocoPhillips Team Up on Syria Offshore Block

FOS Picks Incat Crowther to Design Fast CTV Fleet for Shell’s Brunei Ops

Dolphin Drilling Boosts Backlog with Harbour Energy Deal, Oil India Extension

Oil Prices Edge Higher Amid Uncertainty Over Iran Deal

ADNOC Drilling Posts Record First-Quarter Results with 5% Revenue Rise

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com