ExxonMobil Misses, Chevron Crushes Estimates in Mixed Day for Big Oil

For the biggest US oil explorers, the first quarter was a study in contrasts: Chevron Corporation beat every analyst estimate, while larger rival Exxon Mobil Corporation fell short on both production and profit.

 

The performances underscore the challenges facing the two descendants of John D Rockefeller’s sprawling 19th century empire.

 

For Chevron, it is about rewarding long-suffering investors who had funded costly natural gas projects in Australia for more than a decade.

 

For Exxon, Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods is tasked with rebuilding an asset base which analysts say did not receive enough investment over the past ten years.

 

Chevron took full advantage of crude’s rally during the period with earnings and output potentially raising the chance of share buybacks later this year, although none were announced on the 27th April.

 

Exxon, meanwhile, posted its worst first-quarter production figure since the Mobil merger in 1999.

 

“It’s striking that in the context of US$70 oil where production is rebounding for almost everyone, Exxon has been down seven of the last eight quarters,” Pavel Molchanov, a Houston-based analyst at Raymond James Financial Inc, said.

 

Investors are rewarding Chevron, given their preference for immediate payback after the 2014-2016 oil price crushed returns. Meanwhile, Exxon is a long-term bet, with Darren Woods anticipating capital expenditure swelling to more than US$30 billion a year well into the next decade.

 

“Chevron was very, very strong on really good upstream,” Jason Gammel, a London-based analyst at Jefferies LLC, said. “Exxon was a bit disappointing.” The result: Exxon tumbled as much as 5.4 percent in New York, wiping out two weeks of gains. Chevron climbed 1.3 percent.

 

Mr Woods has said it is wise to invest now when others are reining in spending and returning cash to shareholders.

 

Irving, Texas-based Exxon pumped the equivalent of 3.889 million barrels a day in the quarter, the first sub-4 million figure for that time of year in almost two decades. The number was also lower than all seven estimates from analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

 

The company’s first-quarter profit of US$1.09 a share was also below analyst estimates.

 

Chevron, in comparison, earned US$1.90 a share during the first three months of the year, well in excess of the US$1.47 average of 18 estimates in a Bloomberg survey of analysts.

 

The company also pumped more crude and natural gas than observers anticipated, Chevron said in a statement, enhancing the benefits from rallying oil prices.

 

Major oil producers in Europe, meanwhile, have posted some of their best quarterly results in years amid an oil rally driven by OPEC-led production cuts, geopolitical threats and swelling demand.

 

With in-built production growth from previous years’ spending, Chevron increased its dividend 3.7 percent earlier this year. But what investors are really looking for is for a resumption of its share buyback programme which was suspended in 2015.

 

In March, CEO Mike Wirth said he would like to do this but cautioned that board members “want to see the cash flow materialise.”

 

Mr Woods, in his second year at the helm, has said buybacks rank below dividends and investments in five key long-term projects from Brazil to Papua New Guinea. Those projects are crucial to future earnings and further opportunities can be more cheaply bought as are rivals retreating, he said in March.

 

Source: Rigzone