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Baker Hughes says Middle East disruptions have affected oilfield activity, despite its high estimates

Baker Hughes, a provider of oilfield services, beat Wall Street estimates for the first quarter profit as strong demand from its industrial and energy technology units offset drilling 'weaknesses' caused by disruptions in Middle East.

The IET unit saw a surge in orders due to the increased demand for electricity from data centers and investments in gas infrastructure, liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), and grid equipment.

The first-quarter IET order total rose to $4.89 billion, up from $3.18billion a year ago.

The disruptions in the Middle East have weighed on oilfield services.

Oilfield Services and Equipment (OFSE), a division of the company, was facing pressure. Its revenue fell 7% to $3.24bn in just one year, due mainly to regional disruptions, as well as the sale of its surface-pressure control business.

The Middle East/Asia revenue dropped by?19%, to $1.15 billion.

Baker Hughes and its peers are yet to see any meaningful benefit from the higher oil prices, following the attacks on Middle East infrastructure and Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Producers remain cautious in increasing drilling.

Even after beating first-quarter expectations, a peer company,?Halliburton, warned earlier this week that disruptions related to the Iran conflict, and the Strait of Hormuz closing, could reduce current-quarter earnings by 7 to 9 cents a share.

SLB, the larger rival, which is due to report Friday, has also warned of a possible 6-9 cents?hit citing operational disruptions within the region.

According to LSEG data, Baker Hughes?reported an adjusted profit per share of 58 cents for the three-month period ended March 31, compared to analysts' expectations?of 49 cents.

The revenue came in at 6.59 billion dollars, which is also higher than the $6.35 billion expected.

(source: Reuters)