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imageOSLO: Norway's Statoil cut its 2016 capital spending guidance as it posted earnings well below forecasts on Wednesday, hit by persistently low crude prices, higher costs at home and abroad, and weaker refinery margins, sending its shares lower.

Its performance echoed that of BP on Tuesday, which posted a 45 percent drop in second-quarter profit, missing analysts' forecasts and prompting another cut to the group's 2016 investment budget to below $17 billion.

Statoil posted a near 70 percent drop in adjusted operating profit to $913 million in the second quarter from $2.9 billion a year ago, well below expectations for $1.4 billion seen in a Reuters poll of analysts.

It cut its 2016 target for capital spending to $12 billion from $13 billion and its 2016 exploration spending target to $1.8 billion from $2 billion.

Statoil shares were down 3.08 percent at 0734 GMT, the worst performing stock on the European oil and gas index, which dipped 0.15 percent.

All three divisions of the company performed below forecasts. It was Statoil's worst-ever adjusted operating profit after that posted in its first quarter.

Statoil's key Norwegian exploration and production division produced less oil and gas than expected, had higher exploration costs and higher-than-expected operating expenses and general and administrative expenses, Swedbank analyst Teodor Sveen-Nilsen said in a note to clients.

For the international division, "at first glance it looks like the miss is solely explained by high opex (operating expense)," Sveen-Nilsen added.

For its third division, marketing processing and renewable energy, Statoil cited weaker refinery margins, as did BP.

"Our financial results were affected by low oil and gas prices in the quarter," Chief Executive Eldar Saetre said in a statement.

Though oil prices have climbed more than 60 percent from a near 13-year low in January they remain more than 60 percent below their June 2014 peak.

Statoil kept its quarterly dividend at $0.2201 per share, in line with a promise, and repeated it would make the same payment for the third quarter.

It also maintained its production guidance, expecting annual organic production growth of around 1 percent from 2014 to 2017.

Saetre said he saw "clear signs" that the oil market would reach balance soon. "We believe the oil market will be balanced in the course of this year," he told a news conference.

"Overall, despite continuing to strive to strip out costs in order to better support value longer term - the current low oil and gas prices are making things really challenging for Statoil," Santander said in a note to clients.

Copyright Reuters, 2016

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