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Royal Dutch Shell reported a 22% drop in underlying earnings for 2025 to $18.53 billion and a quarterly adjusted profit of $3.26 billion for Q4 — its weakest quarter since early 2021.
The group cited a 19% annual decline in crude prices, unfavourable tax adjustments and weakness in its chemicals business as key drivers.
Despite the earnings shortfall and rising net debt, Shell announced a 4% increase in its quarterly dividend to $0.372 per share and started a $3.5 billion share buyback programme to be completed before its Q1 2026 results.
Net debt rose to about $45.7 billion at year-end.
The company said free cash flow remained robust at around $26 billion for 2025 and reiterated 2026 cash capex guidance of $20–22 billion.
CEO Wael Sawan described 2025 as one of “accelerated momentum” with continued focus on portfolio streamlining and cost savings, while the group flagged expectations that oil prices will stabilise in a mid-$60s to $70s per barrel range.
















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