The Mercury News

Chevron, Exxon eye billions in stock buybacks

Companies decide to reward shareholde­rs, not expand drilling

- By Kevin Crowley

Exxon Mobil and Chevron are plowing windfall profits into share buybacks as soaring energy prices boost cash flows.

Exxon will revive repurchase­s for the first time since 2016, spending as much as $10 billion from next year in a move that surprised analysts. Chevron, based in San Ramon. is considerin­g an expansion of its buyback program after surging natural gas prices and oil-refining returns drove free cash flow to an all-time high in the last quarter. Shares of both companies climbed.

The oil giants are using windfall profits to reward shareholde­rs rather than ramp up spending on new drilling as was done during previous booms. That’s a blow to energy consumers around the world as supply shortages and price spikes spark inflation concerns. Both companies kept 2022 budgets within previously guided ranges.

With commuting and air travel picking up, there’s “strong demand across our products with more recovery expected” during the current quarter, Chevron Chief Financial Officer Pierre Breber said in an interview. “We’re a better company than we were pre-Covid. Costs are down, production is up, and we’re much more capital efficient.”

Exxon earned $1.58 a share during the third quarter, compared with the $1.56 average estimate among analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Net income, excluding some one-time gains and losses, reached $6.8 billion, the most since 2014.

Exxon rose 0.6% to $64.71 at 11:39 a.m. in New York, bringing the year-todate advance to 57%. Chevron climbed 1.1%.

Double-digit returns

Another surprise was Exxon’s announceme­nt of a fourfold increase in low-carbon investment­s just months after activist investor Engine No. 1 replaced a quarter of the oil giant’s board.

“We expect double-digit returns across all our businesses and we don’t look at this business really any differentl­y,” Chief Financial Officer Kathryn Mikells said during a conference call.

Crucially, Exxon’s longterm capital budget is unchanged, indicating less cash available for fossilfuel projects.

Chevron’s quarterly profit excluding one-time

items was $2.96 per share, which surpassed every analyst estimate compiled by Bloomberg. Earnings were so strong that the company’s net-debt-to-capital ratio has fallen below its target of 20% to 25%, a key threshold that could spur an increase in stock repurchase­s beyond the current $2 billion to $3 billion a year range, Breber said.

“We’re fast approachin­g a net-debt ratio where we could increase our buyback guidance range even further,” he said.

Chevron reduced its fullyear capital-budget target to $12 billion to $13 billion from $14 billion, citing pandemic-related project deferrals and reduced costs in the Permian Basin.

The oil explorer has thus far avoided the attentions of activist investors like those that have targeted Exxon and, more recently, Shell. Chevron Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth is betting on a strategy of enriching shareholde­rs and increasing production, while at the same time addressing climate concerns by lowering a controvers­ial measure of carbon emissions.

Free cash flow of $6.7 billion in the quarter allowed Chevron to fund a dividend that’s among the top 10 in the S&P 500 Index, and reduce debt. But the company bought back just $625 million of shares in the period, the mid-point of its targeted range.

Chevron shares rose as much as 2.3% in pre-market trading in New York while Exxon gained as much as 1.6%.

What Bloomberg Intelligen­ce says

“Focus shifts to growth, with Exxon betting on Guyana, the Permian and downstream to carry the load over the next two years. ESG pressures may shift future spending. In light of its massive $15 billion annual dividend, we believe asset sales and a lower debt load would be needed if Exxon turns toward greener investment­s.”

said Fernando Valle, senior energy analyst, and Brett Gibbs, associate analyst

A big reason why oil supermajor­s are generating record cash flow is because of deep budget cuts made during the pandemicdr­iven oil-market collapse of last year. Chevron’s yearto-date spending was 22% lower than the year-earlier period.

But with record natural gas prices in Europe and Asia, and robust crude prices everywhere, there are growing incentives to increase investment­s in fossil fuels.

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