SLB Limited
CorpDigest
SLB Limited
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$35.7B
▲ 0.8% vs FY2023 ($35.4B)
Net Income: $5.2B
SLB Limited reported $35.7B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a growth of 0.8% compared to the 2023 figure of $35.4B.
SLB's operating margin reached 15.2% in FY2024 — a figure that reflects the ongoing revenue mix shift toward digital subscriptions and high-margin equipment sales rather than purely time-and-materials service work. For an oilfield services company that for decades was priced as a cyclical industrials business, a mid-teens operating margin positions SLB closer to specialty industrials or enterprise software than to commodity drilling services. Total FY2024 revenue was $35.73 billion, essentially flat against $35.43 billion in FY2022 and FY2023, reflecting a market in which international and offshore activity has grown while North American land activity has moderated. Net income was $5.23 billion, producing a 14.6% net margin. The market capitalization of approximately $65 billion implies a forward P/E that is modest relative to the digital mix shift story, though meaningful uncertainty about the long-term direction of hydrocarbon demand constrains how aggressively investors will re-rate the company. The ChampionX acquisition agreement for $7.7 billion was the largest transaction in SLB's recent history and the most direct statement of the company's intent to own the entire well lifecycle rather than just the drilling and completion phases. Production chemicals — the specialty formulations that prevent scale, corrosion, and emulsion in producing wells — are consumed continuously for the well's productive life and carry recurring revenue characteristics that resemble consumables businesses more than project-based oilfield services. The 2022 exit from Russia following the Ukraine invasion resulted in an asset write-down that removed significant revenue from the baseline, but the company has rebuilt international revenue exposure through Middle Eastern national oil companies, offshore Brazil, and deepwater West Africa — geographies that are less politically volatile and carry higher activity levels.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.