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Saudi Aramco profit drops as it flags cost cuts, divestments

Wednesday, 06 August 2025 | 00:00

Saudi Arabian oil company Aramco (TADAWUL:) reported a 22% drop in second-quarter profit on Tuesday, and the world’s top oil exporter said it was cutting costs and looking to divest assets as crude prices drop and its debt mounts.

The firm’s generous dividends, a key source of funding for ambitious plans to cut the kingdom’s reliance on oil, will be about a third lower this year.

Aramco reported its 10th decline in quarterly net profit to $22.7 billion in the quarter through June, from $29.1 billion a year earlier.

Aramco’s shares were up 0.3% at 23.98 riyals. They have dropped about 14.5% this year, trailing industry peers.

Adjusted net income fell 13.7% to $24.5 billion, above a company-provided median analyst estimate of $23.7 billion.

“What we’re looking at across the portfolio is to unlock capital that is currently locked into low – relatively low-return (assets) … invest it in our core investment, which are high return,” CFO Ziad Al-Murshed told reporters.

He declined to name the assets, but said: “it is your typical low-return that is tied in things like infrastructure.”

Reuters reported last month that Aramco was close to a deal to raise $10 billion from a group led by BlackRock (NYSE:), and is considering selling up to five gas-powered power plants to raise up to $4 billion.

Total borrowing rose to $92.9 billion at June 30 from $74.4 a year prior. Gearing, a measure of indebtedness, rose to 6.5% from minus 0.3% a year earlier and 5.3% the previous quarter.

Aramco is looking at different geographies, currencies and instruments for debt issuance, Al-Murshed said.

The company, long a reliable source of revenue for the Saudi state, confirmed a previously outlined $21.3 billion in total dividends for the second quarter, about $200 million of which is performance-linked dividends.

DIVIDENDS SINK

Aramco in March outlined total dividends of $85.4 billion for 2025 – a 31% drop from more than $124 billion the previous year. The performance-linked component is set to plunge 98% from 2024 to $900 million as free cash flow dwindles.

Free cash flow dropped nearly a fifth year-on-year in the second quarter to $15.2 billion.

For the Saudi government, which owns 81.5% of Aramco shares directly and another 16% through its sovereign wealth fund PIF, dividends are a critical source of income, particularly as it invests to diversify the economy away from oil.

Oil generated 62% of the government’s revenue last year, and the International Monetary fund estimates the kingdom needs oil prices at more than $90 a barrel to balance its 2025 budget.

Aramco’s average realised price was $66.7 a barrel in the quarter, down from $76.3 in the first quarter and $85.7 in the second quarter of 2024.

“We’ve pencilled in for Saudi Arabia to run a budget deficit of 5.0% of GDP this year,” said James Swanston, senior economist at Capital Economics, adding the government would likely overshoot its annual borrowing plan.

That would be more than double the 2.3% deficit, or about $27 billion, the kingdom projected in November for the 2025 budget.
Source: Reuters

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