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The oil price rout has hit BP hard.
The energy giant on Tuesday reported its full-year and fourth quarter results, saying profits cratered 51% last year from $12.1 billion (£8.4 billion) to $5.9 billion (£4.1 billion).
When you drill down into the results it's even worse — fourth quarter profit was just $196 million (£136.1 million) compared with $2.2 billion (£1.5 billion) for the fourth quarter of 2014. That's a huge 91% drop, far worse than the 51% registered across the year. Things are trending downwards.
The cause is clear — tanking oil prices. BP says in its statement:
Despite strong operational performance and growing cost reductions, the lower underlying result was predominantly driven by the impact of steeply lower oil and gas prices on BP's Upstream segment, which reported a pre-tax loss for the quarter.
The Brent crude oil marker price averaged $44 a barrel in 4Q 2015 compared with $77 a year earlier, and the average Henry Hub US gas marker price was $2.27 per million British thermal units compared with $4.04 in 4Q 2014.
BP took a $2.6 billion (£1.8 billion) writedown on its upstream business — the part that actually drills oil out of the ground — in the fourth quarter alone.
As a result of collapsing profits and prices, BP says it is cutting up to 4,000 jobs in its upstream business in 2016 and up to 3,000 in its downstream business — which processes and delivers energy — by the end of 2017.
BP's costs were cut by $3.4 billion (£2.3 billion) in 2016 and it is aiming for an addition $7 billion (£4.8 billion) in savings by 2017.
As you might expect after such a downbeat update, shares are tanking. BP has opened down over 5% on Tuesday morning in London.BP