Chevron Tops Profit Estimates
By Kathi on Jul 30, 2021 | 02:30 AM IST
Chevron Corp
on Friday reported its highest profit in six quarters and joined an oil
industry stampede to reward investors with share buybacks, as rebounding crude
oil prices carried earnings and cash flow to pre-pandemic levels. Oil and gas
are trading near multi-year highs as fuel consumption has thrown off pandemic
losses and natural gas has soared on weather demand. OPEC’s decision to carry
production curbs into next year has kept oil above $70 per barrel.
The company cut its annual capital spending forecast to
about $13 billion, now below what it had spent last year. It had earlier
budgeted $14 billion to $16 billion a year in annual capital spending through
2025.
Chevron last year cut expenses to allow profits to flow at
above $50 a barrel. Lower costs and higher prices generated the highest cash
flow in two years, enabling it to pare debt and resume share repurchases,
officials said. Share buybacks will resume this quarter at an annual rate of
between $2 billion and $3 billion, said Chief Executive Michael Wirth, about
half the annual rate it had planned.
The company and its rivals halted purchases early last year
as the pandemic cut oil demand. Chevron now joins Royal Dutch Shell,
TotalEnergies and Equinor in resuming buybacks.
“We’ve always said we would begin buybacks when we were
confident that we could sustain it, and our breakeven is $50 per barrel and we
are now well above it,” Chief Financial Officer Pierre Breber told Reuters.
“We’re trying to win back investors… demand for our
products has fully recovered, demand for our stock is recovering.”
The second-largest U.S. producer’s oil and gas production
unit earned $3.18 billion in the quarter compared with a loss of $6.09 billion
a year ago.
Total production rose 5% to 3.13 million barrels of oil
equivalent per day (boepd), while Chevron sold its U.S. oil for $54 a barrel
last quarter, compared with $19 a year earlier.
Chevron expects output from the Permian basin to be almost
same as last year’s, but said it will add drilling rigs in the second half. Its
production rate from the top U.S. shale basin is expected to be 600,000 boepd
by 2021 end.
“It’s still a fundamentally oversupplied world and that’s
why we’re being cautious… We’re not going to be driven by an output target or a
production target,” Jay Johnson, Chevron’s upstream executive vice president
told analysts.
Meanwhile, top U.S. oil producer Exxon Mobil said it
expects more spending on key projects, including Guyana and Permian, in the
second half of this year.
Anish Kapadia, director of energy at London-based Palissy
Advisors, said Chevron’s Permian additions “still seem measured” and the two
U.S. producers seemed to be focusing on cashflow over production.
Crude oil prices this year through June were up 57%, while
hard-hit refining and chemicals improved with better plant utilization rates
and margins.
The United States accounted for most of a $839 million
profit at Chevron’s refining operations in the quarter as Asia units suffered
from weak margins.
CFO Breber said cost-cuts are largely over and it has
achieved targeted savings from its 2020 takeover of Noble Energy. It is aiming
to raise up to $2 billion from asset sales this year. Its adjusted profit of
$1.71 per share beat Wall Street estimates of $1.59, according to Refinitiv
IBES data.
The company’s shares were down 0.9% at $101.65 in afternoon
trade after opening higher amid a broader drop in energy stocks.