Oil and natural gas prices softened in 2023, as slowing global growth and a weaker-than-expected economic recovery in China weighed on demand.
"Compared with 2022, 2023 full-year financial statements primarily reflected lower prices across all commodities, partly offset by higher sales volumes," Woodside Energy said in a statement.
For the year ended Dec. 31, Woodside received $68.6 per barrel of oil equivalent (boe), compared with $98.4 per boe a year earlier, while annual sales volume rose 19% to 201.5 million barrels of oil equivalent (mmboe).
As a result, underlying net profit after tax (NPAT) came in at $3.32 billion for 2023, down from $5.23 billion, opens new tab in 2022. However, that beat an LSEG estimate of $3.03 billion.
Shares of the company rose 1.3% to A$30.39 by 2313 GMT, while the benchmark index (.AXJO), opens new tab was down about 0.3%.
"Today's underlying NPAT reflects an 10% ROE (return on equity), well below offshore peers of about 19%," analysts at Citi said in a note.
"With no credible new growth projects after Trion in the hopper, the company will likely have to acquire assets to generate shareholder wealth," they said, adding that there was little reason to own Woodside shares on Tuesday.
Woodside's Sangomar oil and gas project in Senegal remains on track for first oil production in mid-2024, while the Scarborough gas project off the Pilbara coast in Western Australia continues to target first LNG cargo in 2026.
Last week, the company announced the sale of a 15.1% non-operating stake in its Scarborough project to Japan's JERA for about $1.4 billion - its second stake sale to a Japanese LNG buyer in six months.
Woodside, which recently scrapped talks on a potential $52 billion merger with smaller rival Santos (STO.AX), opens new tab, announced a final dividend of 60 cents per share, lower than the 144 cents apiece declared for 2022.
It maintained its fiscal 2024 production guidance of between 185 and 195 mmboe and reaffirmed its capital expenditure forecast of between $5.0 billion and $5.5 billion.