Glencore's recent financial results indicate a decline in overall earnings, primarily attributed to a challenging energy trading market.
Despite this, the company's metal trading division achieved record earnings last year, benefiting from optimal market conditions. Combined, the two trading units reported an 8% fall in adjusted earnings before interest and taxes, totaling $2.92 billion.
While metal traders saw a nearly 20% surge in adjusted earnings, the energy and coal trading business experienced a significant drop of close to a third from the previous year, contrasting with the record profits of 2022 driven by market chaos following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Glencore also announced capital returns of approximately $2 billion, comprising a base dividend of $0.10 per share and an unexpected top-up distribution of $0.07 per share, exceeding analyst expectations due to lower-than-forecast net debt of $11.2 billion.
The article also provides a broader commodities roundup, including market movements for oil, gas, gold, and copper, alongside other corporate news.
Data sourced from public RSS feeds and News APIs.