Chevron reported stronger-than-expected third-quarter results on Friday, supported by record oil and gas production following its roughly $53-billion acquisition of Hess Corporation. The U.S. supermajor posted adjusted earnings of $1.85 per share, above analyst expectations near $1.68, while total production rose to 4.1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) from 3.4 million boepd a year earlier, according to Reuters.
The increase reflects integration of Hess’s operations in Guyana and the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, along with higher domestic shale output and improved downstream margins.
Operating cash flow, excluding working-capital changes, climbed nearly 20% year-on-year to about $9.9 billion, driven by stronger refining profits and steady crude throughput, Bloomberg reported.
Chevron reiterated that its balance sheet remains under-levered and confirmed ongoing dividend growth and share repurchases. Management also reaffirmed plans to cut $2-3 billion in costs through 2026 by streamlining global operations and consolidating overlapping positions from Hess, according to Reuters.
The company previously warned that Hess integration would have a $200-400 million quarterly impact, a temporary cost expected to taper as synergies are realized, Reuters reported. Anchored by the Stabroek block, the Guyana portfolio is transformational for Chevron’s upstream base, offering multi-year production growth outside OPEC jurisdictions.
Attention now turns to the November 12 Investor Day, where investors expect updates on capital spending, synergy timing, and free-cash-flow targets. Preview reporting from Reuters indicates markets will focus on disciplined capex guidance rather than aggressive expansion, with emphasis on execution in Guyana and sustained output from U.S. shale.
According to the Financial Times, analysts are weighing how Chevron and Exxon Mobil are reshaping their portfolios to stay competitive in a lower-price environment. Both companies have expanded output even as benchmark crude prices softened by focusing on efficiency and high-margin production rather than volume growth alone.
Chevron’s integration of Hess’s low-cost Guyana barrels, alongside Exxon’s similar push to concentrate spending in the same basin, suggests a consolidation of U.S. majors around projects with shorter payback periods and resilient break-evens. This could set the stage for the next round of supermajor competition.
By Michael Kern for Oilprice.com
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