(Adds quotes, context)
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell
boosted its dividend and launched a $2 billion share buyback
programme on Thursday after second quarter profits jumped to
their highest in over two years following a sharp rise in oil
and gas prices.
The Anglo-Dutch company saw a surge in cash generation,
driven by higher commodity prices and a recovery in global
energy demand from the pandemic slump, which also helped it to
cut debt.
"We are stepping up our shareholder distributions today,
increasing dividends and starting share buybacks, while we
continue to invest for the future of energy," Shell Chief
Executive Ben van Beurden said in a statement.
Adjusted earnings rose to $5.53 billion, the highest since
the fourth quarter of 2018, exceeding an average analyst
forecast provided by the company for a $5.07 billion profit.
That compares with earnings of $2.9 billion a year earlier.
Shell increased its dividend for a second consecutive
quarter by 38% to 24 cents, a year after it cut its dividend for
the first time since the 1940s in response to the collapse in
energy demand caused by the pandemic.
The company also launched a $2 billion share buyback
programme that it aims to complete by the end of the year.
Free cashflow, a metric of the company's performance
following deep cost cuts last year, rose in the quarter to $9.7
billion, its highest since the first quarter of 2020.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso; Editing by Edmund Blair and Barbara
Lewis)