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Luberef net profit falls 7% in Q1

A fall in by-products sales leads to profit dip.

SABIC net loss $322 million

The company's net profit was $66m in Q1 2024

PureHealth posts $137m Q1 net profit

The Group's revenue increased 8 percent YoY.

Borouge Q1 net profit $281 million

The total dividend paid to shareholders in 2024 $1.3bn.

Emirates expects first 777X delivery in H2 2026

Boeing had pushed back the first delivery to 2026 from 2025.

Global dividends hit record US$568 billion in Q2

Firms in Europe, excluding Britain, led the pack with payouts rising by 9.7 percent to $184.5 billion. (AFP)
  • The report said banks accounted for half of the world's dividend growth as their margins were boosted by interest rate hikes
  • Nestle, Swiss food giant, was the world's biggest dividend payer, followed by British bank HSBC and German automaker Mercedes-Benz

Paris, France–Dividends paid by the world’s biggest listed companies soared to a record $568.1 billion in the second quarter, with payouts to shareholders expected to grow further despite economic uncertainty, a study showed Wednesday.

Payments by the 1,200 biggest public companies rose more than expected, increasing by 4.9 percent compared to the same April-to-June period last year, according to the report by asset management firm Janus Henderson.

Banks accounted for half of the world’s dividend growth as their margins were boosted by interest rate hikes, the report said.

Automakers represented one-seventh of the increase.

Firms in Europe, excluding Britain, led the pack with payouts rising by 9.7 percent to $184.5 billion. North American companies paid out $165.3 billion, a 4.2 percent increase.

Swiss food giant Nestle was the world’s biggest dividend payer, followed by British bank HSBC and German automaker Mercedes-Benz.

Ben Lofthouse, head of global equity income at Janus Henderson, said global economic growth is “moderating” as interest rates increase.

“Markets now expect global profits to be flat this year, after soaring to record highs in 2022, and when we speak to companies around the world, they are now more cautious about the outlook,” Lofthouse said.

Central banks have hiked rates as they battle high inflation. Lenders have responded by increasing their own rates, boosting their profits.

While a weaker economy is usually bad for banks, their rising margins are driving dividend payouts, Lofthouse said.

However, he added, “we do expect dividend growth to continue.”