Natural Gas Lifts Chevron Q1 Earnings Amid Oil Weakness

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Chevron Corporation CVX reported adjusted first-quarter earnings per share of $2.18, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $2.15. The outperformance stemmed from higher-than-expected U.S. natural gas production in the company’s key upstream segment. The unit’s domestic output of 2,859 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) came in above the consensus mark of 2,666 MMcf/d. A healthy gain in the commodity’s U.S. realizations also played its part.

However, the bottom line came well below the year-ago adjusted profit of $2.93 due to weaker oil price realizations and a dip in refined product sales margins. 

The company generated revenues of $47.6 billion. The sales figure missed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $48.7 billion and decreased 2.3% year over year.

Chevron Corporation Price, Consensus and EPS Surprise

Chevron Corporation Price, Consensus and EPS Surprise
Chevron Corporation Price, Consensus and EPS Surprise

Chevron Corporation price-consensus-eps-surprise-chart | Chevron Corporation Quote

Segment Performance

Upstream: Chevron’s production of crude oil and natural gas — at 3,353 thousand oil-equivalent barrels per day (MBOE/d) (59% liquids) — edged up 0.2% year over year. The latest volume statistics primarily reflect higher output from the Permian basin, Kazakhstan and the Gulf of America, offset by asset sales in Canada and Republic of Congo. 

The U.S. output rose 4% year over year to 1,636 MBOE/d but the company’s international operations (accounting for 51% of the total) dropped 3.2% to 1,717 MBOE/d. 

With volumes essentially flat from last year and lower oil realizations, Chevron’s first-quarter 2025 upstream segment profit fell 28.3% to $3.8 billion. To some extent, this was offset by higher natural gas sales price. 

At $55.26 per barrel, Chevron’s average realized liquids prices in the U.S. were 3.7% below the year-earlier levels, while prices overseas decreased 6.7% to $67.69 per barrel. As far as natural gas is concerned, the commodity more than doubled in the U.S. though it declined 1.8% internationally.

Downstream: Chevron’s downstream segment recorded a profit of $325 million, plunging 58.5% from last year’s income of $783 million. The slip primarily underlined lower product sales margins.

(Find the latest earnings estimates and surprises on Zacks Earnings Calendar.)

Cash Flows, Capital Expenditure

The company recorded $5.2 billion in cash flow from operations, compared to $6.8 billion the year-ago period due to a drop in earnings and tax payments associated with divestment in Canada. Chevron’s free cash flow for the quarter was $1.3 billion. 

Further, Chevron paid $3 billion in dividends and bought back $3.9 billion worth of its shares.

The Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) company spent around $3.9 billion in capital and exploratory expenditures during the quarter, compared to the year-ago period’s $4.1 billion.

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