Increase in profits and windfall for shareholders of CAC40 groups in 2022

At a time when French households are crumbling under bills and inflation, French CAC40 companies are doing very well: in 2022, thanks to luxury and energy records, they generated 142 billion euros in cumulative profits. This is a little less than the peak of 2021, but nevertheless augurs well for a good year for shareholders.

The turnover of these companies reached 1.729 billion euros, according to an AFP count, up 19% over one year, thanks to sales inflated by inflation for many groups. Net profit fell by 9% compared to nearly 156 billion in 2021, a year marked by the extraordinary result of nearly 25 billion from Vivendi due to a sale. In 2022, the media giant even went into the red, posting the worst loss in the CAC40 with 1 billion euros.

The biggest profit goes to CMA-CGM

The AFP calculation does not take into account two groups, Pernod Ricard and Alstom, which have staggered accounting years. The aggregate decline nevertheless masks all-round records, starting with energy and its flagship TotalEnergies, which posted the biggest profit in the index with 19.5 billion euros, ahead of the car manufacturer Stellantis with 16.8 billion. euros.

The biggest profit of a French company in 2022, however, is that of CMA-CGM, the world’s third largest shipowner, not listed on the stock exchange, with 24.9 billion dollars. In total, the energy sector made a profit of 23.2 billion euros (+14%) despite significant charges related to the war in Ukraine.

Excluding accounting effects, earnings jumped further, reflecting the exceptional year fueled by rising energy prices, in the wake of the post-Covid recovery and the war in Ukraine. The war has also left its mark on industrialists like ArcelorMittal, with a billion dollars in provisions to cover its Ukrainian losses.

Renault posted the second net loss of the CAC, of ​​338 million euros, after a charge of 2.3 billion caused by the sale of Avtovaz, Russian manufacturer of Lada.

Conversely, luxury (LVMH, Kering, Hermès, L’Oréal) saw its profits swell by 23%, or 4.5 billion euros more over one year and an increase of 80% compared to 2019 – – taking advantage of being able to pass on the increase in production costs to selling prices.

The largest profit increases go to Orange (+820% compared to 2021, a year weighed down by depreciation) and the semiconductor manufacturer STMicroelectronics (+118%), which took advantage of the global “strong demand” for the commodity rare microchips.

The shareholders’ bonus

Like profits, payments to shareholders are progressing, under a rain of criticism accusing companies of not paying as much to employees, nor of doing enough for the climate. No CAC40 group has announced that it will lower its dividend even though these had already reached a record in 2022, in France (56.5 billion euros) and in the world (1.560 billion dollars).

LVMH, which has paid 5 billion euros in corporate taxes worldwide, should pay a total of some 6 billion euros to its shareholders, of which nearly 3 billion go to the family of CEO Bernard Arnault, and distribute 400 million euros to its approximately 39,000 French employees.

Societe Generale wants to redistribute 90% of its profit to shareholders, with an increase in the dividend, despite the fall in its results under the effect of the sale of its Russian subsidiary Rosbank. TotalEnergies will invest 16 billion dollars, including 4 in “low carbon energies”, and pay nearly 9 billion euros in dividends.

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