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Royal Dutch Shell on Feb. 5 reported a 22% fall in full-year adjusted earnings to $18.5 billion for 2025 and its weakest quarterly adjusted profit in nearly five years (about $3.3bn in Q4), as global oil prices tumbled.
The group said it generated robust cashflow—cash from operations around $42.9bn for the year and free cash flow cited at roughly $26bn—while net debt rose to about $45.7bn.
Management approved a 4% quarterly dividend increase to $0.372 per share and launched a $3.5bn share buyback to be completed in Q1, marking the 17th straight quarter of buybacks of at least $3bn.
Shell said it achieved roughly $5.1bn of cost savings since 2022 and set 2026 cash capex guidance near $20–22bn.
Company statements highlighted operational resilience in integrated gas and upstream, but results were weighed down by weaker chemicals trading, tax adjustments and a prolonged oil price rout (Brent briefly below $60/bbl in late 2025). Activists criticised continuing large payouts amid falling profits and concerns over renewables investment and executive pay.























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