Halliburton said today that first-quarter profit rose 6 per cent, meeting Wall Street expectations, as customers in markets including the Middle East and Asia spent more on oil and gas exploration and production.
Halliburton and rivals including Schlumberger and Weatherford International have seen faster growth in overseas markets, while North America has slowed.
Record crude oil prices and a two-year high in natural gas futures prices have prompted exploration companies to increase spending, leading to a more optimistic outlook-even in North America-for the oilfield services companies.
"The fundamentals of the world oil and gas market are projecting that the next leg up in this extended cycle is near," Dave Lesar, Halliburton's chief executive, said in a statement.
Mr Lesar also said North America "...is much stronger than may have been anticipated just a few months ago."
Halliburton, which opened a headquarters in Dubai last year in a bid to win more international business, said first-quarter profit increased to $584 million, or 64 cents per share, from $552 million, or 54 cents per share, a year earlier.
Revenue rose 18 per cent to $4 billion.
"I thought the commentary from management was very positive," said Roger Read, oilfield services analyst with Natixis Bleichroeder. "They didn't blow the quarter away, but they weren't expected to. The first quarter is typically a tough one, with
weather impact and product sales in the fourth quarter that don't recur.
In North America, Halliburton's revenue rose 11 per cent to $1.86 billion while operating income was nearly flat at $491 million.
Halliburton said revenue outside North America soared 24 per cent to $2.16 billion, while operating income rose 21 per cent to $422 million.
Also today, the company confirmed it won a large three-year contract for work in Saudi Aramco's Manifa field, which has a production target of 900,000 barrels of oil per day.