ExxonMobil's Growth Plan Is Starting to Bear Fruit

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Investing in ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) has been an extremely frustrating endeavor over the past few years. Management's plans to grow earnings could make your mouth water, but tepid earnings results were enough to give anyone a headache.

This past quarter, though, the company's results started to show the slightest hints of how this growth plan will affect the bottom line. The company also gave the green light to several of its key needle-moving development projects that will get it one step closer to achieving those ambitious goals.

Let's look at Exxon's most recent earnings results and see why investors should be pleased with the progress management has made thus far.

By the numbers

Metric

Q4 2018

Q3 2018

Q4 2017

Revenue

$71.89 billion

$76.60 billion

$66.51 billion

Net income

$6.00 billion

$6.24 billion

$8.38 billion

EPS (diluted)

$1.41

$1.46

$1.97

Operating cash flow

$8.61 billion

$11.10 billion

$7.41 billion

DATA SOURCE: EXXONMOBIL EARNINGS RELEASE. EPS= EARNINGS PER SHARE.

Considering oil prices dropped 40% over the course of the fourth quarter to less than $50 a barrel, these results don't look as bad as one might have assumed. One thing that was working in ExxonMobil's favor was higher natural gas prices. As big oil peer Royal Dutch Shell reported earlier this week, natural gas price realizations were some of the highest we've seen in years. That, plus one-time gains for the sale of its refinery and associated assets in Italy, as well as its retail network in Germany, helped to push refining earnings higher.

Bar chart of XOM earnings by business segment for Q4 2017, Q3 2018, and Q4 2018. Shows large gains for downstream offsetting sequential decline for upstream.
Bar chart of XOM earnings by business segment for Q4 2017, Q3 2018, and Q4 2018. Shows large gains for downstream offsetting sequential decline for upstream.

DATA SOURCE: EXXONMOBIL EARNINGS RELEASE. CHART BY AUTHOR. *ADJUSTED TO EXCLUDE THE IMPACT OF U.S. TAX CHANGES AND ASSET IMPAIRMENTS.

The highlights

  • Total oil and gas production for the quarter was 4.01 million barrels of oil equivalent. It was the first time in several years the company reported a year-over-year increase in production and continued last quarter's trend of steadily increasing production.

  • In an apparent new quarterly tradition, the company announced its 10th discovery in offshore Guyana and raised its reserve estimates to over 5 billion barrels of oil for the entire block. Exxon intends to ramp up activity there, with two drillships doing exploratory work. It also expects to give the final investment decision on phases 2 and 3 of its development plan there.

  • ExxonMobil completed the upgrade work at its Rotterdam refinery with a new hydrocracker. The additional process train will allow the facility to increase its production of low-sulfur distillate and Group II base oil lubricants. According to management, this upgrade will double earnings for the site and positions the company well for the pending emission restrictions for oceangoing vessels set to take place in 2020.

  • The company is also leveraging its massive Permian Basin production base with several new infrastructure and downstream investments in the Gulf Coast region. The company just gave the green light to expand its Beaumont, Texas, refinery by 65% to 616,000 barrels per day. This, coupled with its 1 million barrel-per-day pipeline with Plains All American, is part of an effort to use the integrated model to maximize the value of its production and be less exposed to volatile crude oil prices in the United States.

  • ExxonMobil also announced that it gave final investment decisions for a multibillion-dollar gas-to-power project in Vietnam and a domestic gas project in Australia.

  • As part of the company's nascent renewable energy efforts, it signed a joint venture with Swiss specialty chemical manufacturer Clariant to work on its biofuel research.