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Despite Lower Oil Prices, Chevron's Strategy Continues to Pay Dividends for Investors

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Lower oil prices and other issues impacted Chevron's earnings in the first quarter.

  • The oil company is prudently slowing its share repurchase rate.

  • It still has many reasons for optimism about what's ahead.

Oil price volatility will always affect Chevron's (NYSE: CVX) financial results. That was evident in the first quarter as its earnings fell compared to the year-ago period. Meanwhile, the decline in crude prices in the current quarter has led the oil company to slow the pace of its share repurchase program.

However, despite all this, Chevron's strategy is paying off. The oil giant is producing lots of cash, the bulk of which it's returning to shareholders via dividends and buybacks. With its cash flow on track to surge over the next year, it's in an excellent position to continue growing shareholder value.

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Oil pumps with the sun setting in the background.
Image source: Getty Images.

Drilling down into the latest quarter

Chevron reported $3.8 billion, or $2.18 per share, of adjusted earnings during the first quarter. While that was down from the year-ago level ($5.4 billion or $2.93 per share), it did exceed analysts' expectations ($2.16 per share). "This quarter reflected continued strong execution and progress on our objective to deliver superior shareholder value," stated CEO Mike Wirth in the earnings press release.

The company battled several headwinds in the quarter, including lower oil prices, weaker refined product margins, and unfavorable tax and foreign exchange effects. Its production was roughly flat in the period as asset sales (including selling its Canadian assets) offset the growth from TCO (Kazakhstan), the Permian Basin, and the Gulf of Mexico (also known in the U.S. as the Gulf of America).

Chevron's TCO output jumped 20% as it completed the Future Growth Project. Meanwhile, production in the Permian increased 12% due to investment and efficiency gains and rose 7% in the Gulf due to the Ballymore and other recently completed projects.

Chevron produced $7.6 billion of cash flow from operations during the period and $3.7 billion of free cash flow (excluding working capital adjustments). The company used its excess free cash and strong balance sheet to return $6.9 billion to shareholders during the period. It paid $3 billion in dividends and repurchased $3.9 billion in shares.

Chevron also spent $2.2 billion to buy nearly 5% of Hess' (NYSE: HES) outstanding shares, driven by its confidence that it will close that needle-moving acquisition this year. The company ended the period with a 14.4% net leverage ratio, which is still well below its 20% to 25% target range.