The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Exxon profit surges, just not enough for stock

- By David Koenig

Rising oil prices pushed second-quarter profit at Exxon Mobil Corp. up 18 percent to $3.95 billion, but the results Friday fell short of Wall Street expectatio­ns, and the shares fell 2.7 percent.

The price of benchmark internatio­nal crude is up more than 50 percent from a year ago. But Exxon’s production of oil and natural gas slid 7 percent, so it didn’t fully take advantage of the higher prices.

Rival Chevron Corp., by contrast, boosted production 2 percent and more than doubled its second-quarter profit from a year ago.

“The second-quarter results were well below market expectatio­ns,” Neil Hansen, Exxon’s vice president of investor relations, acknowledg­ed at the start of a call with analysts. He said the company was making progress with key investment­s that will pay off in the long term.

Exxon boosted its capital spending sharply — a reversal from the cutting that Exxon and other major oil companies did after the price collapse that started in 2014. It has major projects underway off the coast of South America, in Africa and Papua New Guinea.

Neil Chapman, a senior vice president who oversees Exxon’s exploratio­n and production business, said the second quarter was the low point and production will increase over the rest of the year.

Exxon, however, now expects to fall short of a forecast Chapman made in March — that 2018 production would match last year. Exxon predicted Friday that it will produce the equivalent of 3.8 million barrels a day including natural gas, down from 4 million barrels a day in 2017.

Among the reasons Chapman gave for the miss were an earthquake that interrupte­d operations in Papua New Guinea and the company’s retreat on natural gas in the U.S. because of relatively low prices. He said the company would focus on the most profitable production.

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