Chevron Corporation (CVX.US), the U.S. oil and gas giant, has significantly boosted its oil production and cash flow after completing the $53 billion acquisition of Hess Corporation (HES.US), delivering better-than-expected earnings despite prolonged weak crude prices. The company has reached a major inflection point in cash flow expansion.
Financial reports show Chevron's Q3 revenue reached $49.73 billion, down 1.9% year-over-year but $2.31 billion above expectations. Net profit stood at approximately $3.6 billion, a 20% decline, while adjusted EPS of $1.85 surpassed Wall Street's average estimate of $1.66. Alongside European rival Shell, which also reported stronger-than-expected results, and fellow U.S. energy major ExxonMobil, Chevron outperformed in a challenging market.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, is heading for its largest annual drop in five years as OPEC+ continues increasing supply. This "oversupply expectation" and weak oil prices have significantly eroded post-pandemic oil industry profits and diminished the regulatory advantages previously enjoyed under former U.S. President Donald Trump's pro-fossil fuel policies.
Despite the U.S. becoming the world's largest oil and gas producer, low prices, high volatility, and concerns about finite fossil fuel reserves have kept the energy sector's weighting in the S&P 500 below 3%.
Chevron's global production surged 21% to 4.1 million barrels per day equivalent, primarily due to integrating Hess's 30% stake in the ExxonMobil-operated Stabroek block offshore Guyana. Even amid weak prices, Chevron and Shell achieved profit growth through production increases. Consequently, Chevron's operating cash flow jumped 20% year-over-year to $9.9 billion despite Brent crude's significant decline since the Russia-Ukraine war's early stages.
"We previously discussed an upcoming cash flow inflection point, and we saw that in Q3," said Chevron CFO Amy Bonar, emphasizing Hess assets are "already materially impacting performance."
For Chevron and ExxonMobil—"Big Oil" giants—the key challenge remains proving to Wall Street their ability to sustain massive dividends and long-term buybacks amid potentially prolonged low oil prices. Chevron repurchased $2.6 billion in shares during Q3, maintaining pace with the prior quarter after reducing buybacks earlier this year. The company also paid $3.4 billion in dividends, significantly increasing payouts post-Hess acquisition.
Chevron CEO Mike Wirth has implemented measures to transform the company into a stable cash flow generator resilient to oil and gas boom-bust cycles. Excluding Hess, Chevron's production is on track for 7% growth this year, with a further 5% expected by 2026, driven by high-margin fields in Kazakhstan and the Gulf of Mexico that remain profitable even at $20/barrel.
U.S. benchmark WTI crude has traded around $60/barrel recently. Chevron has also curbed output growth in capital-intensive shale fields (e.g., Permian Basin, Denver-Julesburg) while cutting 20% of its global workforce to boost profitability and free cash flow.
"We're in a very strong position regardless of price environment or near-term pressures," Bonar stated during the earnings call. Despite Brent crude's ~13% decline this year, Chevron's shares have risen 6% against the trend.
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